Stable functional networks exhibit consistent timing in the human brain
Autor: | Sara K. Inati, Kareem A. Zaghloul, Julio I. Chapeton |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Adult Male medicine.medical_specialty Computer science Models Neurological Electroencephalography Clinical neurophysiology Temporal lobe Functional networks 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Neural Pathways medicine Reaction Time Humans Evoked Potentials Brain Mapping Epilepsy medicine.diagnostic_test Brain Mutual information Human brain Original Articles 030104 developmental biology medicine.anatomical_structure Refractory epilepsy Female Neurology (clinical) Neuroscience 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Neuroanatomy |
Zdroj: | Brain : a journal of neurology. 140(3) |
ISSN: | 1460-2156 |
Popis: | Despite many advances in the study of large-scale human functional networks, the question of timing, stability, and direction of communication between cortical regions has not been fully addressed. At the cellular level, neuronal communication occurs through axons and dendrites, and the time required for such communication is well defined and preserved. At larger spatial scales, however, the relationship between timing, direction, and communication between brain regions is less clear. Here, we use a measure of effective connectivity to identify connections between brain regions that exhibit communication with consistent timing. We hypothesized that if two brain regions are communicating, then knowledge of the activity in one region should allow an external observer to better predict activity in the other region, and that such communication involves a consistent time delay. We examine this question using intracranial electroencephalography captured from nine human participants with medically refractory epilepsy. We use a coupling measure based on time-lagged mutual information to identify effective connections between brain regions that exhibit a statistically significant increase in average mutual information at a consistent time delay. These identified connections result in sparse, directed functional networks that are stable over minutes, hours, and days. Notably, the time delays associated with these connections are also highly preserved over multiple time scales. We characterize the anatomic locations of these connections, and find that the propagation of activity exhibits a preferred posterior to anterior temporal lobe direction, consistent across participants. Moreover, networks constructed from connections that reliably exhibit consistent timing between anatomic regions demonstrate features of a small-world architecture, with many reliable connections between anatomically neighbouring regions and few long range connections. Together, our results demonstrate that cortical regions exhibit functional relationships with well-defined and consistent timing, and the stability of these relationships over multiple time scales suggests that these stable pathways may be reliably and repeatedly used for large-scale cortical communication. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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