4.7 Article

Anatomical connectivity patterns predict face selectivity in the fusiform gyrus

Journal

NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 321-327

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nn.3001

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Funding

  1. US Public Health Service [DA023427]
  2. US National Institute of Mental Health [F32 MH084488]
  3. US National Eye Institute [T32 EY013935]
  4. Poitras Center for Affective Disorders Research
  5. Simons Foundation
  6. Ellison Medical Foundation

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A fundamental assumption in neuroscience is that brain structure determines function. Accordingly, functionally distinct regions of cortex should be structurally distinct in their connections to other areas. We tested this hypothesis in relation to face selectivity in the fusiform gyrus. By using only structural connectivity, as measured through diffusion-weighted imaging, we were able to predict functional activation to faces in the fusiform gyrus. These predictions outperformed two control models and a standard group-average benchmark. The structure function relationship discovered from the initial participants was highly robust in predicting activation in a second group of participants, despite differences in acquisition parameters and stimuli. This approach can thus reliably estimate activation in participants who cannot perform functional imaging tasks and is an alternative to group-activation maps. Additionally, we identified cortical regions whose connectivity was highly influential in predicting face selectivity within the fusiform, suggesting a possible mechanistic architecture underlying face processing in humans.

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