Hierarchical modularity in human brain functional networks
D. Meunier, R. Lambiotte, A. Fornito, K.D. Ersche, E.T. Bullmore

TL;DR
This study reveals that human brain functional networks exhibit a hierarchical modular organization with consistent structures across individuals, highlighting key regions and modules involved in brain connectivity.
Contribution
The paper introduces a computationally efficient method for hierarchical modular decomposition of high-resolution brain networks, demonstrating their modular structure and inter-individual similarities.
Findings
Brain networks have a hierarchical modular organization.
High similarity (I=0.63) of community structure across subjects.
Identification of key modules and connector nodes in association cortex.
Abstract
The idea that complex systems have a hierarchical modular organization originates in the early 1960s and has recently attracted fresh support from quantitative studies of large scale, real-life networks. Here we investigate the hierarchical modular (or "modules-within-modules") decomposition of human brain functional networks, measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in 18 healthy volunteers under no-task or resting conditions. We used a customized template to extract networks with more than 1800 regional nodes, and we applied a fast algorithm to identify nested modular structure at several hierarchical levels. We used mutual information, 0 < I < 1, to estimate the similarity of community structure of networks in different subjects, and to identify the individual network that is most representative of the group. Results show that human brain functional networks have a…
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