Heat kernels with functional connectomes reveal atypical energy transport in peripheral subnetworks in autism
Markus D. Schirmer, Ai Wern Chung

TL;DR
This study uses heat kernel analysis of functional connectomes to reveal atypical energy transport in peripheral brain subnetworks in autism, highlighting differences beyond core hub regions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a heat kernel framework to analyze energy transport in brain subnetworks, revealing peripheral regions' altered activity in autism.
Findings
Significant differences in energy transport features between autism and controls.
Peripheral subnetworks show increased statistical differences compared to hubs.
Heat kernel features correlate with atypical functional organization in autism.
Abstract
Autism is increasing in prevalence and is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterised by impairments in communication skills and social behaviour. Connectomes enable a systems-level representation of the brain with recent interests in understanding the distributed nature of higher order cognitive function using modules or subnetworks. By dividing the connectome according to a central component of the brain critical for its function (it's hub), we investigate network organisation in autism from hub through to peripheral subnetworks. We complement this analysis by extracting features of energy transport computed from heat kernels fitted with increasing time steps. This heat kernel framework is advantageous as it can capture the energy transported in all direct and indirect pathways between pair-wise regions over 'time', with features that have correspondence to small-world properties. We…
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