Functional brain networks reflect spatial and temporal autocorrelation

被引:22
|
作者
Shinn, Maxwell [1 ,2 ]
Hu, Amber [3 ]
Turner, Laurel [3 ]
Noble, Stephanie [4 ]
Preller, Katrin H. [2 ,5 ]
Ji, Jie Lisa [2 ]
Moujaes, Flora [5 ]
Achard, Sophie [6 ]
Scheinost, Dustin [1 ,4 ]
Constable, R. Todd [1 ,4 ]
Krystal, John H. [2 ]
Vollenweider, Franz X. [5 ]
Lee, Daeyeol [7 ,8 ,9 ,10 ]
Anticevic, Alan [1 ,2 ]
Bullmore, Edward T. [11 ]
Murray, John D. [1 ,2 ,12 ]
机构
[1] Yale Univ, Interdept Neurosci Program, New Haven, CT 06520 USA
[2] Yale Univ, Dept Psychiat, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
[3] Yale Univ, Yale Coll, New Haven, CT USA
[4] Yale Univ, Dept Radiol & Biomed Imaging, New Haven, CT USA
[5] Univ Hosp Psychiat, Dept Psychiat Psychotherapy & Psychosomat, Zurich, Switzerland
[6] Univ Grenoble Alpes, CNRS, Inria, Grenoble INP,LJK, Grenoble, France
[7] Johns Hopkins Univ, Zanvyl Krieger Mind Brain Inst, Baltimore, MD USA
[8] Johns Hopkins Univ, Kavli Discovery Neurosci Inst, Baltimore, MD USA
[9] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Psychol & Brain Sci, Baltimore, MD USA
[10] Johns Hopkins Univ, Dept Neurosci, Baltimore, MD USA
[11] Univ Cambridge, Dept Psychiat, Cambridge, England
[12] Yale Univ, Dept Phys, New Haven, CT 06511 USA
基金
英国医学研究理事会; 英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会; 瑞士国家科学基金会;
关键词
TIME-SERIES; BOLD SIGNAL; FMRI DATA; CONNECTIVITY; PARCELLATION; RELIABILITY; DYNAMICS; NOISE; MRI; VARIABILITY;
D O I
10.1038/s41593-023-01299-3
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
High-throughput experimental methods in neuroscience have led to an explosion of techniques for measuring complex interactions and multi-dimensional patterns. However, whether sophisticated measures of emergent phenomena can be traced back to simpler, low-dimensional statistics is largely unknown. To explore this question, we examined resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) data using complex topology measures from network neuroscience. Here we show that spatial and temporal autocorrelation are reliable statistics that explain numerous measures of network topology. Surrogate time series with subject-matched spatial and temporal autocorrelation capture nearly all reliable individual and regional variation in these topology measures. Network topology changes during aging are driven by spatial autocorrelation, and multiple serotonergic drugs causally induce the same topographic change in temporal autocorrelation. This reductionistic interpretation of widely used complexity measures may help link them to neurobiology. Individual variation in fMRI-derived brain networks is reproduced in a model using only the smoothness (autocorrelation) of the fMRI time series. Smoothness has implication for aging and can be causally manipulated by psychedelic serotonergic drugs.
引用
收藏
页码:867 / 878
页数:36
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