Integrating temporal and spatial scales: Human structural network motifs across age and region-of-interest size
Christoph Echtermeyer, Cheol E. Han, Anna Rotarska-Jagiela, Harald, Mohr, Peter J. Uhlhaas, Marcus Kaiser

TL;DR
This study investigates how human brain network motifs vary across different ages and spatial resolutions, revealing that spatial resolution significantly influences topological features while spatial measures remain more consistent.
Contribution
It demonstrates the impact of spatial and temporal scales on network motifs and highlights the importance of considering resolution effects in connectome analysis.
Findings
Motif diversity correlates with network size and age.
Certain motifs are scale- or age-specific.
Spatial resolution affects topological but not spatial measures.
Abstract
Human brain networks can be characterized at different temporal or spatial scales given by the age of the subject or the spatial resolution of the neuroimaging method. Integration of data across scales can only be successful if the combined networks show a similar architecture. One way to compare networks is to look at spatial features, based on fibre length, and topological features of individual nodes where outlier nodes form single node motifs whose frequency yields a fingerprint of the network. Here, we observe how characteristic single node motifs change over age (12-23 years) and network size (414, 813, and 1615 nodes) for diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) structural connectivity in healthy human subjects. First, we find the number and diversity of motifs in a network to be strongly correlated. Second, comparing different scales, the number and diversity of motifs varied across the…
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