4.8 Article

Causal interactions between fronto-parietal central executive and default-mode networks in humans

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1311772110

Keywords

task positive network; task negative network; fMRI; neuromodulation

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [P30 MH089888, R01 MH091860]
  2. Sierra-Pacific Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center at the Palo Alto Department of Veterans Affairs (VA)
  3. NIH, the Wiegers Family Fund
  4. Snyder Foundation
  5. NIH [P41 EB015891]
  6. War Related Illness and Injury Study Center Special Fellowship Program at the VA Palo Alto
  7. Medical Research Service of the Department of Veterans Affairs, VA Palo Alto

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Information processing during human cognitive and emotional operations is thought to involve the dynamic interplay of several large-scale neural networks, including the fronto-parietal central executive network (CEN), cingulo-opercular salience network (SN), and the medial prefrontal-medial parietal default mode networks (DMN). It has been theorized that there is a causal neural mechanism by which the CEN/SN negatively regulate the DMN. Support for this idea has come from correlational neuroimaging studies; however, direct evidence for this neural mechanism is lacking. Here we undertook a direct test of this mechanism by combining transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) with functional MRI to causally excite or inhibit TMS-accessible prefrontal nodes within the CEN or SN and determine consequent effects on the DMN. Single-pulse excitatory stimulations delivered to only the CEN node induced negative DMN connectivity with the CEN and SN, consistent with the CEN/SN's hypothesized negative regulation of the DMN. Conversely, low-frequency inhibitory repetitive TMS to the CEN node resulted in a shift of DMN signal fro\m its normally low-frequency range to a higher frequency, suggesting disinhibition of DMN activity. Moreover, the CEN node exhibited this causal regulatory relationship primarily with the medial prefrontal portion of the DMN. These findings significantly advance our understanding of the causal mechanisms by which major brain networks normally coordinate information processing. Given that poorly regulated information processing is a hallmark of most neuropsychiatric disorders, these findings provide a foundation for ways to study network dysregulation and develop brain stimulation treatments for these disorders.

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