A Twin MRI Study of Size Variations in the Human Brain
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- research article
- Published by MIT Press in Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience
- Vol. 12 (1) , 223-232
- https://doi.org/10.1162/089892900561850
Abstract
Although it is well known that there is considerable variation among individuals in the size of the human brain, the etiology of less extreme individual differences in brain size is largely unknown. We present here data from the first large twin sample (N=132 individuals) in which the size of brain structures has been measured. As part of an ongoing project examining the brain correlates of reading disability (RD), whole brain morphometric analyses of structural magnetic response image (MRI) scans were performed on a sample of adolescent twins. Specifically, there were 25 monozygotic (MZ) and 23 dizygotic (DZ) pairs in which at least one member of each pair had RD and 9 MZ and 9 DZ pairs in which neither member had RD. We first factor-analyzed volume data for 13 individual brain structures, comprising all of the neocortex and most of the subcortex. This analysis yielded two factors (“cortical” and “subcortical”) that accounted for 64% of the variance. We next tested whether genetic and environmental influences on brain size variations varied for these two factors or by hemisphere. We computed intraclass correlations within MZ and DZ pairs in each sample for the cortical and subcortical factor scores, for left and right neocortex, and for the total cerebral volume. All five MZ correlations were substantial (r's=.78 to .98) and significant in both samples, as well as being larger than the corresponding DZ correlations, (r's=0.32 to 0.65) in both samples. The MZ-DZ difference was significant for 3 variables in the RD sample and for one variable in the smaller control sample. These results indicate significant genetic influences on these variables. The magnitude of genetic influence did not vary markedly either for the 2 factors or the 2 hemispheres. There was also a positive correlation between brain size and full-scale IQ, consistent with the results of earlier studies. The total cerebral volume was moderately correlated (r=.42, p<.01, two-tailed) with full-scale IQ in the RD sample; there was a similar trend in the smaller control sample (r=.31, p<.07, two-tailed). Corrections of similar magnitude were found between the subcortical factor and full-scale IQ, whereas the results for the cortical factor (r=.16 and .13) were smaller and not significant. In sum, these results provide evidence for the heritability of individual differences in brain size which do not vary markedly by hemisphere or for neocortex relative to subcortex. Since there are also correlations between brain size and full-scale IQ in this sample, it is possible that genetic influences on brain size partly contribute to individual differences in IQ.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Volumetric MRI analysis comparing subjects having attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder with normal controlsNeurology, 1997
- Autism: Towards an Integration of Clinical, Genetic, Neuropsychological, and Neurobiological PerspectivesJournal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 1996
- The Young Adult Human Brain: An MRI-based Morphometric AnalysisCerebral Cortex, 1994
- Intelligence and brain structure in normal individualsAmerican Journal of Psychiatry, 1993
- Intelligence and changes in regional cerebral glucose metabolic rate following learningIntelligence, 1992
- Volumetric analyses of central nervous system neoplasm based on MRIPediatric Neurology, 1991
- Anatomic segmentation and volumetric calculations in nuclear magnetic resonance imagingIEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging, 1989
- Magnetic resonance imaging–based brain morphometry: Development and application to normal subjectsAnnals of Neurology, 1989
- Experience and Brain DevelopmentChild Development, 1987
- The neurobiologie consequences of down syndromeBrain Research Bulletin, 1986