Low-dimensional controllability of brain networks
Remy Ben Messaoud, Vincent Le Du, Brigitte Charlotte Kaufmann,, Baptiste Couvy-Duchesne, Lara Migliaccio, Paolo Bartolomeo, Mario Chavez,, Fabrizio De Vico Fallani

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel low-dimensional control framework for brain networks, improving controllability accuracy with limited driver access and revealing key brain regions influencing large-scale brain dynamics.
Contribution
It develops a spectral graph theory-based method controlling low-dimensional embeddings of brain networks, enhancing control accuracy in scenarios with few driver nodes, and identifies influential brain regions.
Findings
Low-dimensional embeddings improve control accuracy with few drivers.
New metrics identify key driver regions in the human connectome.
Results reveal brain lateralization and control maps across brain systems.
Abstract
Network controllability is a powerful tool to study causal relationships in complex systems and identify the driver nodes for steering the network dynamics into desired states. However, due to ill-posed conditions, results become unreliable when the number of drivers becomes too small compared to the network size. This is a very common situation, particularly in real-world applications, where the possibility to access multiple nodes at the same time is limited by technological constraints, such as in the human brain. Although targeting smaller network parts might improve accuracy, challenges may remain for extremely unbalanced situations, when for example there is one single driver. To address this problem, we developed a mathematical framework that combines concepts from spectral graph theory and modern network science. Instead of controlling the original network dynamics, we aimed to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications
