| Literature DB >> 18497865 |
Abstract
A large-scale brain network can be defined as a set of segregated and integrated regions, that is, distant regions that share strong anatomical connections and functional interactions. Data-driven investigation of such networks has recently received a great deal of attention in blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We here review the rationale for such an investigation, the methods used, the results obtained, and also discuss some issues that have to be faced for an efficient exploration.Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18497865 PMCID: PMC2386147 DOI: 10.1155/2008/218519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biomed Imaging ISSN: 1687-4188
Literature summary of the different networks found in network investigation of fMRI data. Methods—HC: hierarchical clustering, SOM: self-organizing map algorithm, ICA: independent component analysis. Networks—M/SM: motor/sensorimotor, V: visual, A: auditory, DM: default mode, dAtt: dorsal attentional, vAtt: ventral attentional, EC: executive control. Networks found are denoted by “X.” (*) In addition to primary cortices (sensorimotor, visual, and auditory), the clusters shown by Cordes et al. [63] were essentially bilateral single regions (thalami, fusiform gyri, and frontal gyri) which were parts of different networks of reference. (†) Except for the sensorimotor system, the networks identified by Peltier et al. [61] were not properly labeled; the spatial organizations of the maps shown seemed similar to the attentional networks. (‡) The results presented by Calhoun et al. [73] were partial, mentioning the extraction of other networks that they did not show neither comment; another study on similar datasets showed that the sensorimotor and the dorsal attentional networks might be detected too [74].
| Task | Reference | Method | Network | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M/SM | V | A | DM | dAtt | vAtt | EC | |||
| At rest | [ | HC | X | X | X | X(*) | X(*) | ||
| [ | SOM | X | (†) | (†) | |||||
| [ | ICA | X | X | X | X | ||||
| [ | ICA | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
| [ | ICA | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
| [ | ICA | X | X | X | X | X | |||
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| Blocked visual | [ | ICA | X(‡) | X | X | X(‡) | |||
| [ | ICA | X | X | X | |||||
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| Blocked motor | [ | LSNI | X | X | X | ||||
Figure 1Example of extended large-scale networks extracted in fMRI at rest. The six networks were identified using spatial ICA and a hierarchical clustering approach similar to that of [79] on a group of 20 healthy subjects acquired at rest. Networks—M/SM: motor/sensorimotor, V: visual, DM: default mode, dAtt: dorsal attentional, vAtt: ventral attentional, EC: executive control. The auditory network was not found as a separate network but some temporal regions of the primary auditory cortex are overlapped by other networks (in particular the M/SM network and the two attentional networks). The union of all networks does not add up to comprise the entire brain; for instance, some parts of the frontal cortex do not belong to any reported networks. By contrast, some brain regions simultaneously belong to several networks (in black).
Example of extended large-scale networks extracted in fMRI at rest. Peak foci corresponding to the six networks identified using spatial ICA and a hierarchical clustering approach similar to that of [79] on a group of 20 healthy subjects acquired at rest—M/SM: motor/sensorimotor, V: visual, DM: default mode, dAtt: dorsal attentional, vAtt: ventral attentional, EC: executive control.
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