4.6 Article

Assessing Variations in Areal Organization for the Intrinsic Brain: From Fingerprints to Reliability

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 26, Issue 11, Pages 4192-4211

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhw241

Keywords

areal organization; individual differences; reliability; resting-state fMRI; transition zones

Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research (973) Program [2015CB351702]
  2. Funds of International Exchange for Post-doctoral Scientists of China
  3. National Institiute of Health [NIMH U01MH099059, NIMH BRAINS R01-MH101555]
  4. Natural Science Foundation of China [81270023, 81278412, 81171409, 81000583, 81471740, 81220108014]
  5. National Science Foundation for Post-doctoral Scientists of China [2013M530073]
  6. Chinese Academy of Sciences [KSZD-EW-TZ-002]

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Resting state fMRI (R-fMRI) is a powerful in-vivo tool for examining the functional architecture of the human brain. Recent studies have demonstrated the ability to characterize transitions between functionally distinct cortical areas through the mapping of gradients in intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) profiles. To date, this novel approach has primarily been applied to iFC profiles averaged across groups of individuals, or in one case, a single individual scanned multiple times. Here, we used a publically available R-fMRI dataset, in which 30 healthy participants were scanned 10 times (10 min per session), to investigate differences in full-brain transition profiles (i.e., gradient maps, edge maps) across individuals, and their reliability. 10-min R-fMRI scans were sufficient to achieve high accuracies in efforts to fingerprint individuals based upon full-brain transition profiles. Regarding test-retest reliability, the image-wise intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) was moderate, and vertex-level ICC varied depending on region; larger durations of data yielded higher reliability scores universally. Initial application of gradient-based methodologies to a recently published dataset obtained from twins suggested inter-individual variation in areal profiles might have genetic and familial origins. Overall, these results illustrate the utility of gradient-based iFC approaches for studying inter-individual variation in brain function.

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