Multiscale modeling of brain network organization
Charley Presigny, Fabrizio De Vico Fallani

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent advances in multiscale brain modeling, emphasizing multilayer network analysis, structure-function relationships, and potential applications of generative modeling and machine learning in neuroscience.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of analytical tools and recent developments in multiscale brain network modeling, highlighting new insights and future directions.
Findings
Multilayer network properties reveal higher-order brain organization.
Identification of multimodal network biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease.
Recent integration of machine learning with multilayer network analysis.
Abstract
A complete understanding of the brain requires an integrated description of the numerous scales of neural organization. It means studying the interplay of genes, synapses, and even whole brain regions which ultimately leads to different types of behavior, from perception to action, while asleep or awake. Yet, multiscale brain modeling is challenging, in part because of the difficulty to access simultaneously to information from multiple spatiotemporal scales. While some insights have been gained on the role of specific microcircuits (e.g., thalamocortical), a comprehensive characterization of how changes occurring at one scale can have an impact on other ones, remains poorly understood. Recent efforts to address this gap include the development of new analytical tools mostly adapted from network science and dynamical systems theory. These theoretical contributions provide a powerful…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Neural dynamics and brain function · Neural Networks and Applications
