driving and driven architectures of directed small-world human brain functional networks驾驶和驱动直接小世界人类大脑功能网络的体系结构.pdfVIP

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driving and driven architectures of directed small-world human brain functional networks驾驶和驱动直接小世界人类大脑功能网络的体系结构.pdf

driving and driven architectures of directed small-world human brain functional networks驾驶和驱动直接小世界人类大脑功能网络的体系结构

Driving and Driven Architectures of Directed Small-World Human Brain Functional Networks Chaogan Yan, Yong He* State Key Laboratory of Cognitive Neuroscience and Learning, Beijing Normal University, Beijing, China Abstract Recently, increasing attention has been focused on the investigation of the human brain connectome that describes the patterns of structural and functional connectivity networks of the human brain. Many studies of the human connectome have demonstrated that the brain network follows a small-world topology with an intrinsically cohesive modular structure and includes several network hubs in the medial parietal regions. However, most of these studies have only focused on undirected connections between regions in which the directions of information flow are not taken into account. How the brain regions causally influence each other and how the directed network of human brain is topologically organized remain largely unknown. Here, we applied linear multivariate Granger causality analysis (GCA) and graph theoretical approaches to a resting-state functional MRI dataset with a large cohort of young healthy participants (n = 86) to explore connectivity patterns of the population-based whole-brain functional directed network. This directed brain network exhibited prominent small-world properties, which obviously improved previous results of functional MRI studies showing weak small-world properties in the directed brain networks in terms of a kernel-based GCA and individual analysis. This brain network also showed significant modular structures associated with 5 well known subsystems: fronto-parietal, visual, paralimbic/limbic, subcortical and primary systems. Importantly, we identified several driving hubs predominantly located in the components of the attentional network (e.g., the inferior frontal gyrus, supplementary motor area, i

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