A novel brain partition highlights the modular skeleton shared by structure and function
Ibai Diez, Paolo Bonifazi, I\~naki Escudero, Beatriz Mateos, Miguel A., Mu\~noz, Sebastiano Stramaglia, Jesus M. Cortes

TL;DR
This study introduces a new brain partition based on shared hierarchical modular organization of structural and functional connectivity, revealing a common skeleton that links brain structure and resting-state activity.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel integrative graph analysis approach to identify shared modules between brain structure and function, defining a new brain partition called SFMs.
Findings
Identified common structure-function modules (SFMs) in the brain.
Demonstrated strong correspondence between structural and resting-state networks.
Compared SFMs with classical resting state networks and anatomical parcellations.
Abstract
Elucidating the intricate relationship between brain structure and function, both in healthy and pathological conditions, is a key challenge for modern neuroscience. Recent technical and methodological progress in neuroimaging has helped advance our understanding of this important issue, with diffusion weighted images providing information about structural connectivity (SC) and functional magnetic resonance imaging shedding light on resting state functional connectivity (rsFC). However, comparing these two distinct datasets, each of which can be encoded into a different complex network, is by no means trivial as pairwise link-to-link comparisons represent a relatively restricted perspective and provide only limited information. Thus, we have adopted a more integrative systems approach, exploiting theoretical graph analyses to study both SC and rsFC datasets gathered independently from…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Neural dynamics and brain function
