| Literature DB >> 31990956 |
Máté Fellner1, Bálint Varga1, Vince Grolmusz1,2.
Abstract
In the study of the human connectome, the vertices and the edges of the network of the human brain are analyzed: the vertices of the graphs are the anatomically identified gray matter areas of the subjects; this set is exactly the same for all the subjects. The edges of the graphs correspond to the axonal fibers, connecting these areas. In the biological applications of graph theory, it happens very rarely that scientists examine numerous large graphs on the very same, labeled vertex set. Exactly this is the case in the study of the connectomes. Because of the particularity of these sets of graphs, novel, robust methods need to be developed for their analysis. Here we introduce the new method of the Frequent Network Neighborhood Mapping for the connectome, which serves as a robust identification of the neighborhoods of given vertices of special interest in the graph. We apply the novel method for mapping the neighborhoods of the human hippocampus and discover strong statistical asymmetries between the connectomes of the sexes, computed from the Human Connectome Project. We analyze 413 braingraphs, each with 463 nodes. We show that the hippocampi of men have much more significantly frequent neighbor sets than women; therefore, in a sense, the connections of the hippocampi are more regularly distributed in men and more varied in women. Our results are in contrast to the volumetric studies of the human hippocampus, where it was shown that the relative volume of the hippocampus is the same in men and women.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31990956 PMCID: PMC6986708 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0227910
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The visualization of the frequent neighbor sets.
Suppose we have four braingraphs from four subjects. Blue vertices a, b, c and d denote the same, interesting vertex in the braingraphs of four subjects, say the left hippocampus. Then all the red vertices of the set X are connected to a, b and c; that is, the frequency of X is 3/4. See Fig 2 for further explanation.
Fig 2This figure contains a small change, relative to Fig 1.
In Fig 1, X was a frequent neighbor set, with a frequency of 3/4 = 0.75. Here, set Y with red nodes is a frequent neighbor set with a frequency of 3/4 = 0.75, but X is not, because no three-vertex subset of {a, b, c, d} are connected to all of the elements of X this time: the green vertex is connected to d instead of a. Note, that the degrees of the vertices of X are all equal to 3, both on Figs 1 and 2; therefore, the simple degree-counting does not help in the identification of frequent neighbor sets.
The most frequent subsets of the neighbors of the left hippocampus (cut frequency value: 0.995).
413 subjects from the Human Connectome Project public release were examined. In all the subjects, the left hippocampus is connected to the following three ROIs: the Left-Putamen, Left-Thalamus-Proper and the lh.isthmuscingulate_3, and, therefore, to all 7 (= 23 − 1) non-empty subsets of those (the first 7 lines of the table). The lh.superiortemporal_2 ROI is connected to the left hippocampus in all, but one subjects, so its frequency is 412/413 = 0.99758. Note that no subset, containing lh.superiortemporal_2, may have a higher frequency than the frequency of lh.superiortemporal_2 alone, i.e., 0.99758. Indeed, all the 8 (empty and non-empty) subsets of the Left-Putamen, Left-Thalamus-Proper and the lh.isthmuscingulate_3, together with the lh.superiortemporal_2 is present in 412 out of 413 subjects, i.e., with 0.99517 frequency. The ROI lh.insula_2 is connected to the left hippocampus in 411 subjects out of the 413 subjects, therefore its frequency is 411/413 = 0.99517. Similarly, all the 8 subsets of the ROIs Left-Putamen, Left-Thalamus-Proper, and the lh.isthmuscingulate_3, together with lh.insula_2 have the same 411/413 = 0.99517 frequency. Theoretically, lh.insula_2, together with the lh.superiortemporal_2 may have the same frequency as lh.insula_2 alone (if the subject, where the left hippocampus—lh.superiortemporal_2 edge is missing is one of the two subjects where the left hippocampus—lh.insula_2 edge is missing), but this is not the case: the frequency of the neighbor set {lh.superiortemporal_2,lh.insula_2} is below the cut frequency value for Table 2, i.e., 0.995.
| Frequency | Subset |
|---|---|
| 1 | (Left-Putamen) |
| 1 | (Left-Thalamus-Proper) |
| 1 | (lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 1 | (Left-Putamen)(Left-Thalamus-Proper) |
| 1 | (Left-Putamen)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 1 | (Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 1 | (Left-Putamen)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| . | ........................................................... |
| 0.99758 | (lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (Left-Putamen)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (lh.isthmuscingulate_3)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (Left-Putamen)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (Left-Putamen)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| 0.99758 | (Left-Putamen)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3)(lh.superiortemporal_2) |
| ....... | ................................................................................... |
| 0.99517 | (lh.insula_2) |
| 0.99517 | (Left-Putamen)(lh.insula_2) |
| 0.99517 | (Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.insula_2) |
| 0.99517 | (lh.insula_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 0.99517 | (Left-Putamen)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.insula_2) |
| 0.99517 | (Left-Putamen)(lh.insula_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 0.99517 | (Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.insula_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 0.99517 | (Left-Putamen)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.insula_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
The summary of the results for sex differences.
The first column list the minimum support, or, in other words, the frequency cut-off values: there are two values: 0.8 or 0.9, i.e., 80% 90%. The second column denotes the righ-, left- or both hippocampi; the abbreviation HPC stands for the word “hippocampus”. In the third column the sex is given; the next four columns contain the number size 1, 2, 3 and 4 frequent neighbor-sets of the hippocampus considered. The next column gives the number of the neighbor-sets, which have significantly different frequencies (p = 0.001) in male and female connectomes. The last, ninth column gives the number of neighbor-sets, which are significantly more frequent in male or in female connectomes: the sum of the two numbers in the ninth column is equal to the number in the eighth column. For example, in the first row, we can see that in males, the left hippocampus has 45 frequent 1-element neighbor sets; 844 frequent 2-element neighbor sets, 9102 3-element neighbor sets and 65150 frequent 4-element neighbor sets, where the frequency cut-off is 0.8. Moreover, one can see that there are 15732 sets, differing significantly in frequency in males and in females; and the last column says that from these 15732 sets, 15497 are present in the braingraph of males and only 235 in the braingraphs of females.
| Size | Size | Size | Size | # significant | Sign. diff. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Support | Node | sex | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | differences | for whom |
| 0.8 | HPC left | male | 45 | 844 | 9102 | 65150 | 15732 | 15497 |
| 0.8 | HPC left | female | 38 | 679 | 7128 | 48717 | 235 | |
| 0.8 | HPC right | male | 50 | 1023 | 11989 | 91498 | 1762 | 1659 |
| 0.8 | HPC right | female | 50 | 997 | 10725 | 73424 | 103 | |
| 0.9 | HPC | male | 64 | 1781 | 28823 | 309659 | 19828 | 17688 |
| 0.9 | HPC | female | 62 | 1406 | 17976 | 150167 | 2140 | |
| 0.8 | HPC left | all | 43 | 759 | 7863 | 54861 | ||
| 0.8 | HPC right | all | 52 | 1059 | 11963 | 85624 | ||
| 0.9 | HPC | all | 68 | 1728 | 24741 | 233548 |
Several neighbor-sets of the left hippocampus with the most significant differences in the frequencies between the sexes.
The first five rows list five subsets, which are more frequent in the braingraphs of men than of women. It is interesting that the lh.fusiform_4 ROI is present in the five sets. The next five are the most significant sets with frequencies higher in females than in males. The lh.bankssts_2 and the Brain-Stem ROIs are present in all five sets. The S3 Table lists those neighbor-sets of the left hippocampus, which are significantly more frequent in female connectomes; while S4 Table lists those, which are significantly more frequent in male connectomes, p ≤ 0.01. Similarly, S5 and S6 Tables contain the analogous data for the right hippocampus.
| frequency | frequency | name |
|---|---|---|
| male | female | |
| 0.823 | 0.556 | (lh.fusiform_4)(lh.precuneus_10)(lh.precuneus_11)(lh.superiortemporal_6) |
| 0.823 | 0.561 | (lh.fusiform_4)(lh.isthmuscingulate_2)(lh.precuneus_6)(lh.superiortemporal_6) |
| 0.823 | 0.561 | (lh.fusiform_4)(lh.lingual_6)(lh.precuneus_10)(lh.superiortemporal_6) |
| 0.823 | 0.561 | (lh.fusiform_4)(lh.lingual_8)(lh.precuneus_10)(lh.superiortemporal_6) |
| 0.823 | 0.561 | (lh.fusiform_4)(lh.isthmuscingulate_2)(lh.precuneus_10)(lh.superiortemporal_6) |
| 0.880 | 0.967 | (Brain-Stem)(lh.bankssts_2) |
| 0.880 | 0.967 | (Brain-Stem)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.bankssts_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 0.880 | 0.967 | (Brain-Stem)(Left-Putamen)(lh.bankssts_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
| 0.880 | 0.967 | (Brain-Stem)(Left-Thalamus-Proper)(lh.bankssts_2) |
| 0.880 | 0.967 | (Brain-Stem)(lh.bankssts_2)(lh.isthmuscingulate_3) |
Several neighbor-sets of the right hippocampus with the most significant differences in the frequencies between the sexes.
The first five rows list five subsets, which are more frequent in the braingraphs of men than of women. It is interesting that the rh.precuneus_4 ROI is present in all five sets. The next five sets are the most significant with frequencies higher in females than in males. The rh.fusiform_8 and the rh.middletemporal_9 ROIs are present in all five sets. The S5 Table lists those neighbor-sets of the right hippocampus, which are significantly more frequent in female connectomes; while S6 Table lists those, which are significantly more frequent in male connectomes, p ≤ 0.01.
| frequency | frequency | name |
|---|---|---|
| male | female | |
| 0.840 | 0.682 | (rh.entorhinal_1)(rh.parahippocampal_2)(rh.precuneus_4)(rh.transversetemporal_1) |
| 0.909 | 0.774 | (rh.entorhinal_1)(rh.parahippocampal_2)(rh.precuneus_2)(rh.precuneus_4) |
| 0.914 | 0.782 | (Brain-Stem)(rh.entorhinal_1)(rh.parahippocampal_2)(rh.precuneus_4) |
| 0.914 | 0.787 | (Brain-Stem)(rh.entorhinal_1)(rh.precuneus_2)(rh.precuneus_4) |
| 0.914 | 0.787 | (rh.bankssts_2)(rh.entorhinal_1)(rh.parahippocampal_2)(rh.precuneus_4) |
| 0.736 | 0.862 | (rh.fusiform_8)(rh.inferiortemporal_1)(rh.middletemporal_9) |
| 0.769 | 0.887 | (rh.fusiform_8)(rh.inferiorparietal_4)(rh.lingual_7)(rh.middletemporal_9) |
| 0.769 | 0.887 | (rh.fusiform_8)(rh.middletemporal_9)(rh.supramarginal_9) |
| 0.791 | 0.900 | (rh.fusiform_8)(rh.lingual_7)(rh.middletemporal_9) |
| 0.791 | 0.900 | (Right-Amygdala)(rh.fusiform_8)(rh.middletemporal_9) |
| contains | does not contain | total | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | |||
| 2 | |||
| total |