4.6 Article

Linking structural and effective brain connectivity: structurally informed Parametric Empirical Bayes (si-PEB)

Journal

BRAIN STRUCTURE & FUNCTION
Volume 224, Issue 1, Pages 205-217

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00429-018-1760-8

Keywords

Effective connectivity; Dynamic causal modelling (DCM); Structural connectivity; Functional MRI

Funding

  1. Baasch-Medicus Foundation
  2. Leenaards Foundation
  3. Fund of the Research Committee of the Faculty for Biology and Medicine, University of Lausanne, Switzerland
  4. International Federation of Clinical Neurophysiology
  5. German Research Foundation [DFG PA 847/22-1]
  6. Beitlich Foundation
  7. BBBank Foundation
  8. Wellcome Sponsored Research Grant [539208]

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Despite the potential for better understanding functional neuroanatomy, the complex relationship between neuroimaging measures of brain structure and function has confounded integrative, multimodal analyses of brain connectivity. This is particularly true for task-related effective connectivity, which describes the causal influences between neuronal populations. Here, we assess whether measures of structural connectivity may usefully inform estimates of effective connectivity in larger scale brain networks. To this end, we introduce an integrative approach, capitalising on two recent statistical advances: ParametricEmpiricalBayes, which provides group-level estimates of effective connectivity, and Bayesian model reduction, which enables rapid comparison of competing models. Crucially, we show that structural priors derived from high angular resolution diffusion imaging on a dynamic causal model of a 12-region networkbased on functional MRI data from the same subjectssubstantially improve model evidence (posterior probability 1.00). This provides definitive evidence that structural and effective connectivity depend upon each other in mediating distributed, large-scale interactions in the brain. Furthermore, this work offers novel perspectives for understanding normal brain architecture and its disintegration in clinical conditions.

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