Network Mechanisms Underlying the Regional Diversity of Variance and Time Scales of the Brain's Spontaneous Activity Fluctuations.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Journal of Neuroscience Pub Date : 2025-03-05 DOI:10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1699-24.2024
Adrián Ponce-Alvarez
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Abstract

The brain's activity fluctuations have different temporal scales across the brain regions, with associative regions displaying slower timescales than sensory areas. This hierarchy of timescales has been shown to correlate with both structural brain connectivity and intrinsic regional properties. Here, using publicly available human resting-state fMRI and dMRI data, it was found that, while more structurally connected brain regions presented activity fluctuations with longer timescales, their activity fluctuations presented lower variance. The opposite relationships between the structural connectivity and the variance and temporal scales of resting-state fluctuations, respectively, were not trivially explained by simple network propagation principles. To understand these structure-function relationships, two commonly used whole-brain models were studied, namely, the Hopf and Wilson-Cowan models. These models use the brain's connectome to couple local nodes (representing brain regions) displaying noise-driven oscillations. The models show that the variance and temporal scales of activity fluctuations can oppositely relate to connectivity within specific parameter regions, even when all nodes have the same intrinsic dynamics-but also when intrinsic dynamics are constrained by the myelinization-related macroscopic gradient. These results show that, setting aside intrinsic regional differences, connectivity and network state are sufficient to explain the regional differences in fluctuations' scales. State dependence supports the vision that structure-function relationships can serve as biomarkers of altered brain states. Finally, the results indicate that the hierarchies of timescales and variances reflect a balance between stability and responsivity, with greater and faster responsiveness at the network periphery, while the network core ensures overall system robustness.

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区域差异的网络机制和大脑自发活动波动的时间尺度。
大脑活动的波动在不同的大脑区域有不同的时间尺度,联想区域比感觉区域显示更慢的时间尺度。这种所谓的时间尺度层次已经被证明与大脑的结构连通性和内在的区域特性相关。在这里,利用公开的人类静息状态fMRI和dMRI数据,我们发现,虽然更多结构连接的大脑区域的活动波动具有更长的时间尺度,但它们的活动波动具有更低的方差。结构连通性与静息状态波动的方差和时间尺度之间的相反关系,不能简单地用网络传播原理来解释。为了理解这些结构-功能关系,我们研究了两种常用的全脑模型,即Hopf模型和Wilson-Cowan模型。这些模型使用大脑的连接组来耦合局部节点(代表大脑区域),显示噪声驱动的振荡。这些模型表明,即使所有节点具有相同的内在动力,活动波动的方差和时间尺度也与特定模型参数区域内的连通性相反,但当内在动力受到髓化相关宏观梯度的约束时也是如此。这些结果表明,抛开内在的区域差异,连通性和网络状态足以解释波动尺度的区域差异。状态依赖性支持结构-功能关系可以作为改变大脑状态的生物标志物的观点。最后,结果表明,时间尺度和方差的层次反映了稳定性和响应性之间的平衡,网络外围的响应速度更快,而网络核心则保证了系统的整体鲁棒性。大脑区域在不同的时间尺度上表现出活动波动,联想区比感觉区表现出更慢的时间尺度。这种等级组织是由大规模的连通性和局部属性形成的。本研究表明,波动的方差也是分层组织的,但与时间尺度相比,它作为结构连通性的函数而减小。全脑模型显示,在特定参数区域内,时间尺度和方差的层次结构共同出现,表明状态依赖性可以作为大脑状态和疾病的生物标志物。此外,这些层次结构与不同网络部分的响应性相关联,网络外围的响应性更快更快,而核心的动态更稳定,实现了稳定性和响应性之间的平衡。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
3.80%
发文量
1164
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: JNeurosci (ISSN 0270-6474) is an official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. It is published weekly by the Society, fifty weeks a year, one volume a year. JNeurosci publishes papers on a broad range of topics of general interest to those working on the nervous system. Authors now have an Open Choice option for their published articles
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