| Literature DB >> 33253367 |
Moumita Das1, Vanshika Singh1, Lucina Q Uddin2, Arpan Banerjee1, Dipanjan Roy1.
Abstract
A complete picture of how subcortical nodes, such as the thalamus, exert directional influence on large-scale brain network interactions across age remains elusive. Using directed functional connectivity and weighted net causal outflow on resting-state fMRI data, we provide evidence of a comprehensive reorganization within and between neurocognitive networks (default mode: DMN, salience: SN, and central executive: CEN) associated with age and thalamocortical interactions. We hypothesize that thalamus subserves both modality-specific and integrative hub role in organizing causal weighted outflow among large-scale neurocognitive networks. To this end, we observe that within-network directed functional connectivity is driven by thalamus and progressively weakens with age. Secondly, we find that age-associated increase in between CEN- and DMN-directed functional connectivity is driven by both the SN and the thalamus. Furthermore, left and right thalami act as a causal integrative hub exhibiting substantial interactions with neurocognitive networks with aging and play a crucial role in reconfiguring network outflow. Notably, these results were largely replicated on an independent dataset of matched young and old individuals. Our findings strengthen the hypothesis that the thalamus is a key causal hub balancing both within- and between-network connectivity associated with age and maintenance of cognitive functioning with aging.Entities:
Keywords: directed functional connectivity; healthy aging; multivariate Granger causality; salience network; thalamus; weighted net causal outflow
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33253367 PMCID: PMC7945028 DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhaa334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cereb Cortex ISSN: 1047-3211 Impact factor: 5.357