A Predictor-Informed Multi-Subject Bayesian Approach for Dynamic Functional Connectivity
Jaylen Lee, Sana Hussain, Ryan Warnick, Marina Vannucci, Isaac, Menchaca, Aaron R. Seitz, Xiaoping Hu, Megan A. K. Peters, Michele Guindani

TL;DR
This paper introduces a Bayesian multi-subject model that links physiological measures like pupil dilation to dynamic brain connectivity states during fMRI, enabling shared and individual network analysis.
Contribution
It develops a novel multi-subject Bayesian framework incorporating physiological covariates to model time-varying functional connectivity with state classification and network sparsity.
Findings
Physiological covariates influence connectivity state transitions.
Shared network structures are identified across subjects.
The method effectively controls false discovery rate in network inference.
Abstract
Time Varying Functional Connectivity (TVFC) investigates how the interactions among brain regions vary over the course of an fMRI experiment. The transitions between different individual connectivity states can be modulated by changes in underlying physiological mechanisms that drive functional network dynamics, e.g., changes in attention or cognitive effort as measured by pupil dilation. In this paper, we develop a multi-subject Bayesian framework for estimating dynamic functional networks as a function of time-varying exogenous physiological covariates that are simultaneously recorded in each subject during the fMRI experiment. More specifically, we consider a dynamic Gaussian graphical model approach, where a non-homogeneous hidden Markov model is employed to classify the fMRI time series into latent neurological states, borrowing strength over the entire time course of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Neural dynamics and brain function · Health, Environment, Cognitive Aging
