Analysis of clinical anatomical correlates of motor deficits in stroke by multivariate lesion inference based on game theory
Monica N. Toba, Caroline Malherbe, Melissa Zavaglia, Audrey Arnoux, Mélanie Barbay, Claus C. Hilgetag, Olivier Godefroy

TL;DR
This study uses game theory to identify key brain areas and connections involved in motor deficits after stroke.
Contribution
The study introduces a multivariate game-theoretical method to jointly analyze gray and white matter contributions to motor function.
Findings
The internal capsule, cortico-spinal tract, and cortico-ponto-cerebellum tract are essential for motor function.
The method highlights the importance of connectional anatomy in understanding motor deficits.
Iterative estimated MSA is a practical tool for characterizing brain functions using detailed brain maps.
Abstract
The exploration of causal functional inferences on the basis of deficits observed after neurological impairments is often based on the separate study of gray matter regions or white matter tracts. Here, we aimed at jointly analysing contributions of gray matter and white matter by using the domain of motor function and the approach of iterative estimated Multi-perturbation Shapley Analysis (MSA), a multivariate game-theoretical lesion inference method. We analyzed motor scores assessed by the National Institute of Health Stroke Scale (NIHSS) together with corresponding lesion patterns of 272 stroke patients using a finely parcellated map of 150 gray matter regions and white matter tracts of the brain. MSA revealed a small set of essential causal contributions to motor function from the internal capsule, the cortico-spinal tract, and the cortico-ponto-cerebellum tract. These findings…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpatial Neglect and Hemispheric Dysfunction · Acute Ischemic Stroke Management · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications
