RRC ID 32823
Author Adachi Y, Osada T, Sporns O, Watanabe T, Matsui T, Miyamoto K, Miyashita Y.
Title Functional connectivity between anatomically unconnected areas is shaped by collective network-level effects in the macaque cortex.
Journal Cereb Cortex
Abstract Coherent spontaneous blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) fluctuations have been intensely investigated as a measure of functional connectivity (FC) in the primate neocortex. BOLD-FC is commonly assumed to be constrained by the underlying anatomical connectivity (AC); however, cortical area pairs with no direct AC can also have strong BOLD-FC. On the mechanism generating FC in the absence of direct AC, there are 2 possibilities: 1) FC is determined by signal flows via short connection patterns, such as serial relays and common afferents mediated by a third area; 2) FC is shaped by collective effects governed by network properties of the cortex. In this study, we conducted functional magnetic resonance imaging in anesthetized macaque monkeys and found that BOLD-FC between unconnected areas depends less on serial relays through a third area than on common afferents and, unexpectedly, common efferents, which does not match the first possibility. By utilizing a computational model for interareal BOLD-FC network, we show that the empirically detected AC-FC relationships reflect the configuration of network building blocks (motifs) in the cortical anatomical network, which supports the second possibility. Our findings indicate that FC is not determined solely by interareal short connection patterns but instead is substantially influenced by the network-level cortical architecture.
Volume 22(7)
Pages 1586-92
Published 2012-7-1
DOI 10.1093/cercor/bhr234
PII bhr234
PMID 21893683
MeSH Animals Brain Mapping / methods* Cerebral Cortex / anatomy & histology* Cerebral Cortex / physiology* Computer Simulation Female Macaca Models, Anatomic Models, Neurological* Neural Pathways / anatomy & histology* Neural Pathways / physiology* Oxygen Consumption / physiology*
IF 5.043
Times Cited 116
WOS Category NEUROSCIENCES
Resource
Japanese macaques