4.4 Article

Microstructure-Informed Connectomics: Enriching Large-Scale Descriptions of Healthy and Diseased Brains

期刊

BRAIN CONNECTIVITY
卷 9, 期 2, 页码 113-127

出版社

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/brain.2018.0587

关键词

connectome; network neuroscience; neuroimaging; MRI; pathoconnectomics

资金

  1. Fonds de la Recherche du Quebec-Sante (FRQS)
  2. Canadian League Against Epilepsy
  3. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  4. CIHR
  5. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  6. Quebec Bioimaging Network (QBIN)
  7. National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [DC014021, DC011739, DC014664]
  8. American Heart Association [SFDRN26030003]
  9. NSERC [Discovery-1304413]
  10. CIHR [FDN-154298]
  11. Azrieli Center for Autism Research (ACAR)
  12. SickKids Foundation [NI17-039]
  13. MNI-Cambridge collaboration grant

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Rapid advances in neuroimaging and network science have produced powerful tools and measures to appreciate human brain organization at multiple spatial and temporal scales. It is now possible to obtain increasingly meaningful representations of whole-brain structural and functional brain networks and to formally assess macroscale principles of network topology. In addition to its utility in characterizing healthy brain organization, individual variability, and life span-related changes, there is high promise of network neuroscience for the conceptualization and, ultimately, management of brain disorders. In the current review, we argue for a science of the human brain that, while strongly embracing macroscale connectomics, also recommends awareness of brain properties derived from meso- and microscale resolutions. Such features include MRI markers of tissue microstructure, local functional properties, as well as information from nonimaging domains, including cellular, genetic, or chemical data. Integrating these measures with connectome models promises to better define the individual elements that constitute large-scale networks, and clarify the notion of connection strength among them. By enriching the description of large-scale networks, this approach may improve our understanding of fundamental principles of healthy brain organization. Notably, it may also better define the substrate of prevalent brain disorders, including stroke, autism, as well as drug-resistant epilepsies that are each characterized by intriguing interactions between local anomalies and network-level perturbations.

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