Brain Network Organization Benefits From Nutrition

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Monounsaturated fatty acids, a class of nutrients found in olive oils, nuts and avocados, are linked to general intelligence, a new study by University of Illinois researchers has found. Further, this relationship is driven by the correlation between monounsaturated fatty acids and the organization of the brain’s attention network, the researchers say.

“Our goal is to understand how nutrition might be used to support cognitive performance and to study the ways in which nutrition may influence the functional organization of the human brain. This is important because if we want to develop nutritional interventions that are effective at enhancing cognitive performance, we need to understand the ways that these nutrients influence brain function,"

said study leader Aron Barbey, a professor of psychology.

The study of 99 healthy older adults, recruited through Carle Foundation Hospital in Urbana, compared patterns of fatty acid nutrients found in blood samples, functional MRI data that measured the efficiency of brain networks, and results of a general intelligence test.

Examining The Mediterranean Diet

Lead author Marta Zamroziewicz, a recent Ph.D. graduate of the neuroscience program at Illinois, said:

“In this study, we examined the relationship between groups of fatty acids and brain networks that underlie general intelligence. In doing so, we sought to understand if brain network organization mediated the relationship between fatty acids and general intelligence."

Studies suggesting cognitive benefits of the Mediterranean diet, which is rich in monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFAs), inspired the researchers to focus on this group of fatty acids. They examined nutrients in participants’ blood and found that the fatty acids clustered into two patterns: saturated fatty acids and MUFAs.

“Historically, the approach has been to focus on individual nutrients. But we know that dietary intake doesn’t depend on any one specific nutrient; rather, it reflects broader dietary patterns,"

said Barbey.

Dorsal Attention Network Efficiency

The researchers found that general intelligence was associated with the brain’s dorsal attention network, which plays a central role in attention-demanding tasks and everyday problem solving.

In particular, the researchers found that general intelligence was associated with how efficiently the dorsal attention network is functionally organized used a measure called small-world propensity, which describes how well the neural network is connected within locally clustered regions as well as across globally integrated systems.

In turn, they found that those with higher levels of MUFAs in their blood had greater small-world propensity in their dorsal attention network. Taken together with an observed correlation between higher levels of MUFAs and greater general intelligence, these findings suggest a pathway by which MUFAs affect cognition.

“Our findings provide novel evidence that MUFAs are related to a very specific brain network, the dorsal attentional network, and how optimal this network is functionally organized,” Barbey said. “Our results suggest that if we want to understand the relationship between MUFAs and general intelligence, we need to take the dorsal attention network into account. It’s part of the underlying mechanism that contributes to their relationship."

Barbey hopes these findings will guide further research into how nutrition affects cognition and intelligence. The next step will be to run an interventional study over time to see whether long-term MUFA intake influences brain network organization and intelligence.

Marta K. Zamroziewicz, M. Tanveer Talukdar, Chris E. Zwilling, Aron K. Barbey
Nutritional status, brain network organization, and general intelligence
NeuroImage, 2017; 161: 241 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.08.043


Last Updated on November 29, 2022