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A mathematical perspective on edge-centric brain functional connectivity

Psychology

A mathematical perspective on edge-centric brain functional connectivity

L. Novelli and A. Razi

Dive into groundbreaking research by Leonardo Novelli and Adeel Razi as they explore the edge-centric analysis of neuroimaging time series, particularly fMRI. Their findings reveal that high-amplitude cofluctuations are key to understanding node functional connectivity, challenging traditional static models and urging for dynamic measures in future studies.... show more
Abstract
Edge time series are increasingly used in brain imaging to study the node functional connectivity (nFC) dynamics at the finest temporal resolution while avoiding sliding windows. Here, we lay the mathematical foundations for the edge-centric analysis of neuroimaging time series, explaining why a few high-amplitude cofluctuations drive the nFC across datasets. Our exposition also constitutes a critique of the existing edge-centric studies, showing that their main findings can be derived from the nFC under a static null hypothesis that disregards temporal correlations. Testing the analytic predictions on functional MRI data from the Human Connectome Project confirms that the nFC can explain most variation in the edge FC matrix, the edge communities, the large cofluctuations, and the corresponding spatial patterns. We encourage the use of dynamic measures in future research, which exploit the temporal structure of the edge time series and cannot be replicated by static null models.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
May 16, 2022
Authors
Leonardo Novelli, Adeel Razi
Tags
neuroimaging
fMRI
functional connectivity
edge-centric analysis
cofluctuations
Human Connectome Project
dynamic measures
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