Literature DB >> 23823462

Disconnecting cognition.

Andreas Kleinschmidt1, Patrik Vuilleumier.   

Abstract

PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The aim is to assess whether the recent surge in brain 'connectivity' studies has improved our understanding of neurological deficits and in particular so-called disconnection syndromes. RECENT
FINDINGS: Across a large variety of brain diseases, functional connectivity measures obtained from 'resting state' studies show alterations in distributed neural networks that may be of explanatory value for disease severity. In parallel, studies of structural connectivity reveal how damage to identified fiber tracts can yield specific clinical symptoms. These methods are not only permitting testing of the disconnection mechanism in the few syndromes where it has classically been suspected, but also starting to propose disconnection accounts for other syndromes that have not been conceptualized this way before. Finally, both structural and functional connectivity studies contribute to improve the mechanistic understanding of cognitive deficits in disseminated white matter disease.
SUMMARY: In many respects, studies of structural and functional connectivity using MRI are providing critical novel empirical evidence for--and also against--disconnection as the relevant pathomechanism in neurological syndromes. At the same time, the observation of altered long-range correlation of activity in a wide variety of brain diseases may also be overinterpreted as disconnection, which dilutes an originally rather specific understanding of this concept.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23823462     DOI: 10.1097/WCO.0b013e328363393b

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Opin Neurol        ISSN: 1350-7540            Impact factor:   5.710


  6 in total

1.  Resting state connectivity and cognitive performance in adults with cerebral autosomal-dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy.

Authors:  Breda Cullen; Fiona C Moreton; Michael S Stringer; Rajeev Krishnadas; Dheeraj Kalladka; Maria R López-González; Celestine Santosh; Christian Schwarzbauer; Keith W Muir
Journal:  J Cereb Blood Flow Metab       Date:  2016-02-29       Impact factor: 6.200

2.  What does scalp electroencephalogram coherence tell us about long-range cortical networks?

Authors:  Adam C Snyder; Deepa Issar; Matthew A Smith
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2018-02-13       Impact factor: 3.386

3.  Automated Classification of Mild Cognitive Impairment by Machine Learning With Hippocampus-Related White Matter Network.

Authors:  Yu Zhou; Xiaopeng Si; Yi-Ping Chao; Yuanyuan Chen; Ching-Po Lin; Sicheng Li; Xingjian Zhang; Yulin Sun; Dong Ming; Qiang Li
Journal:  Front Aging Neurosci       Date:  2022-06-14       Impact factor: 5.702

4.  Multiscale Enaction Model (MEM): the case of complexity and "context-sensitivity" in vision.

Authors:  Éric Laurent
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2014-12-19

5.  Hurt but still alive: Residual activity in the parahippocampal cortex conditions the recognition of familiar places in a patient with topographic agnosia.

Authors:  Mitsouko van Assche; Valeria Kebets; Ursula Lopez; Arnaud Saj; Rachel Goldstein; Françoise Bernasconi; Patrik Vuilleumier; Frédéric Assal
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2016-01-08       Impact factor: 4.881

6.  Agraphia of the left hand with dysfunction of the left superior parietal region without callosal lesions.

Authors:  Ryuta Kinno; Hideaki Ohashi; Yukiko Mori; Azusa Shiromaru; Kenjiro Ono
Journal:  eNeurologicalSci       Date:  2018-01-16
  6 in total

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