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On the low dimensionality of behavioral deficits and alterations of brain network connectivity after focal injury

Journal

CORTEX
Volume 107, Issue -, Pages 229-237

Publisher

ELSEVIER MASSON, CORPORATION OFFICE
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2017.12.017

Keywords

Neuropsychology; Stroke; Lesion-symptom mapping; Functional connectivity; Brain networks

Funding

  1. NINDS [RO1 NS095741]
  2. JTC 2017 FLAG-ERA Human Brain Project (HBP)
  3. NIMH [MH096482]

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Traditional neuropsychological approaches emphasize the specificity of behavioral deficits and the modular organization of the brain. At the population level, however, there is emerging evidence that deficits are correlated resulting in a low dimensional structure of post-stroke neurological impairments. Here we consider the implications of low dimensionality for the three-way mapping between structural damage, altered physiology, and behavioral deficits. Understanding this mapping will be aided by large-sample studies that apply multivariate models and focus on explained percentage of variance, as opposed to univariate lesion-symptom techniques that report statistical significance. The low dimensionality of behavioral deficits following stroke is paralleled by widespread, yet relatively consistent, changes in functional connectivity (FC), including a reduction in modularity. Both are related to the structural damage to white matter and subcortical grey commonly produced by stroke. We suggest that large-scale physiological abnormalities following a stroke reduce the variety of neural states visited during task processing and at rest, resulting in a limited repertoire of behavioral states. (C) 2018 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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