Altered structural balance of resting-state networks in autism
Z. Moradimanesh (1), R. Khosrowabadi (1), M. Eshaghi Gordji (2), G. R., Jafari (3, 1, 4) ((1) Institute for Cognitive, Brain Sciences, Shahid, Beheshti University, (2) Department of Mathematics, Semnan University, (3), Department of Physics, Shahid Beheshti University

TL;DR
This study investigates how the balance of triadic interactions in brain networks differs in autism spectrum disorder (ASD) using structural balance theory, revealing overrepresented balanced triads and altered network energy distributions.
Contribution
It provides the first empirical evidence of altered structural balance in ASD brain networks through analysis of triadic interactions in resting-state fMRI data.
Findings
Balanced triads are overrepresented in ASD and controls.
Unbalanced triads are underrepresented in both groups.
ASD networks show narrower energy distribution changes during development.
Abstract
What makes a network complex, in addition to its size, is the interconnected interactions between elements, disruption of which inevitably results in dysfunction. Likewise, the brain networks' complexity arises from interactions beyond pair connections, as it is simplistic to assume that in complex networks state of a link is independently determined only according to its two constituting nodes. This is particularly of note in genetically complex brain impairments, such as the autism spectrum disorder (ASD), which has a surprising heterogeneity in manifestations with no clear-cut neuropathology. Accordingly, structural balance theory (SBT) affirms that in real-world signed networks, a link is remarkably influenced by each of its two nodes' interactions with the third node within a triadic interrelationship. Thus, it is plausible to ask whether ASD is associated with altered structural…
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