4.5 Article

The Relationship between Oscillations in Brain Regions and Functional Connectivity: A Critical Analysis with the Aid of Neural Mass Models

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11040487

Keywords

cortical rhythms; connectivity; neural mass models; excitatory and inhibitory synapses; Granger causality; nonlinear neural phenomena

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This study investigates the propagation of brain rhythms among cortical regions, using simulated neural mass models data to assess the relationship between rhythm propagation, functional connectivity, and brain functioning. The results indicate that connectivity strength has a significant impact on rhythm propagation, and changes in functional connectivity do not always reflect physical changes in synapses.
Propagation of brain rhythms among cortical regions is a relevant aspect of cognitive neuroscience, which is often investigated using functional connectivity (FC) estimation techniques. The aim of this work is to assess the relationship between rhythm propagation, FC and brain functioning using data generated from neural mass models of connected Regions of Interest (ROIs). We simulated networks of four interconnected ROIs, each with a different intrinsic rhythm (in theta, alpha, beta and gamma ranges). Connectivity was estimated using eight estimators and the relationship between structural connectivity and FC was assessed as a function of the connectivity strength and of the inputs to the ROIs. Results show that the Granger estimation provides the best accuracy, with a good capacity to evaluate the connectivity strength. However, the estimated values strongly depend on the input to the ROIs and hence on nonlinear phenomena. When a population works in the linear region, its capacity to transmit a rhythm increases drastically. Conversely, when it saturates, oscillatory activity becomes strongly affected by rhythms incoming from other regions. Changes in functional connectivity do not always reflect a physical change in the synapses. A unique connectivity network can propagate rhythms in very different ways depending on the specific working conditions.

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