| Literature DB >> 30177878 |
Qolamreza R Razlighi1,2,3.
Abstract
While functional connectivity networks are often extracted from resting-state fMRI scans, they have been shown to be active during task performance as well. However, the effect of an in-scanner task on functional connectivity networks is not completely understood. While there is evidence that task-evoked positive BOLD response can alter functional connectivity networks, particularly in the primary sensorimotor cortices, the effect of task-evoked negative BOLD response on the functional connectivity of the Default mode network (DMN) is somewhat ambiguous. In this study, we aim to investigate whether task performance, which is associated with negative BOLD response in the DMN regions, alters the time-course of functional connectivity in the same regions obtained by independent component analysis (ICA). ICA has been used to effectively extract functional connectivity networks during task performance and resting-state. We first demonstrate that performing a simple visual-motor task alters the temporal time-course of the network extracted from the primary visual cortex. Then we show that despite detecting a robust task-evoked negative BOLD response in the DMN regions, a simple visual-motor task does not alter the functional connectivity of the DMN regions. Our findings suggest that different mechanisms may underlie the relationship between task-related activation/deactivation networks and the overlapping functional connectivity networks in the human large-scale brain networks.Entities:
Keywords: Default mode network (DMN); brain large-scale networks; fMRI BOLD; functional connectivity; functional neuroimaging (fMRI); negative BOLD response; task-evoked activity; visual network
Year: 2018 PMID: 30177878 PMCID: PMC6109759 DOI: 10.3389/fncom.2018.00067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Comput Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5188 Impact factor: 2.380
Figure 1The time course of the visual-motor task in our event-related fMRI task paradigm. The blue line shows typical timing for visual stimuli and the red line shows typical timing for audio stimuli. The green bars represent the time of the motoric response to the stimulus. There were at least 55 visual as well as 55 audio stimuli in each run, with mean duration of 1.2 s (ranging from 0.5–3.5 s).
Figure 2The network of activated/deactivated regions during a simple visual-motor task obtained by GLM group-level analysis. Positive BOLD response is thresholded at z > 3 and color-coded with hot color (red to yellow corresponding to z = 3 to z = 8) and negative BOLD response is thresholded at z < −3 and color-coded with cold color (blue to light-blue corresponding to z = −3 to z = −8). The green overlay is the spatial pattern of two separate functional connectivity networks extracted by ICA, and thresholded at z > 3: (A) one overlapping with positive BOLD response in the primary visual cortex, and (B) another overlapping with negative BOLD response in the DMN regions. Three orthogonal and most informative slices are selected for this illustration.
Figure 3Spatial pattern and temporal time-course of the visual network (A,C) and DMN (B,D) obtained by ICA on a single subject before (red) and after (green) removing task-related variability from the fMRI data. The spatial overlaps in (A,B) are delineated in darker green color. (A,B) Show almost a perfect match between the spatial patterns of the networks before and after removing the task-related variability. (C,D) Illustrate the temporal similarity of the networks' time-course before (red) and after (green) removing task-related variability. The time course of the task is depicted in black. While removing task-related variability significantly alters the time-course of the visual network, it has almost no effect on the time-course of the DMN.
Figure 4Illustration of the significance of the alteration in the spatial (green) and temporal (red) characteristics of the visual network and DMN along with their null distributions (light green and light red).