| Literature DB >> 26059098 |
Yuxing Fang1, Zaizhu Han1, Suyu Zhong1, Gaolang Gong1, Luping Song2, Fangsong Liu1, Ruiwang Huang3, Xiaoxia Du2, Rong Sun2, Qiang Wang2, Yong He1, Yanchao Bi1.
Abstract
Semantic processing is central to cognition and is supported by widely distributed gray matter (GM) regions and white matter (WM) tracts. The exact manner in which GM regions are anatomically connected to process semantics remains unknown. We mapped the semantic anatomical network (connectome) by conducting diffusion imaging tractography in 48 healthy participants across 90 GM "nodes," and correlating the integrity of each obtained WM edge and semantic performance across 80 brain-damaged patients. Fifty-three WM edges were obtained whose lower integrity associated with semantic deficits and together with their linked GM nodes constitute a semantic WM network. Graph analyses of this network revealed three structurally segregated modules that point to distinct semantic processing components and identified network hubs and connectors that are central in the communication across the subnetworks. Together, our results provide an anatomical framework of human semantic network, advancing the understanding of the structural substrates supporting semantic processing.Entities:
Keywords: connectomics; diffusion tensor imaging; module; semantics; white-matter network
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26059098 PMCID: PMC6869673 DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Brain Mapp ISSN: 1065-9471 Impact factor: 5.038