Characterizing normal perinatal development of the human brain structural connectivity
Yihan Wu, Lana Vasung, Camilo Calixto, Ali Gholipour, Davood Karimi

TL;DR
This study introduces a computational framework to establish normative baselines for structural brain connectivity during the perinatal period, revealing key developmental trends and asymmetries from diffusion MRI data.
Contribution
The paper presents a novel spatio-temporal averaging method for analyzing perinatal brain connectivity, addressing challenges of rapid development and variability in diffusion MRI data.
Findings
Increased global and local efficiency in brain networks
Decreased characteristic path length during development
Consistent asymmetry patterns in structural connectivity
Abstract
Early brain development is characterized by the formation of a highly organized structural connectome. The interconnected nature of this connectome underlies the brain's cognitive abilities and influences its response to diseases and environmental factors. Hence, quantitative assessment of structural connectivity in the perinatal stage is useful for studying normal and abnormal neurodevelopment. However, estimation of the connectome from diffusion MRI data involves complex computations. For the perinatal period, these computations are further challenged by the rapid brain development and imaging difficulties. Combined with high inter-subject variability, these factors make it difficult to chart the normal development of the structural connectome. As a result, there is a lack of reliable normative baselines of structural connectivity metrics at this critical stage in brain development.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications
MethodsDiffusion
