4.7 Article

The thalamic functional gradient and its relationship to structural basis and cognitive relevance

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 218, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116960

Keywords

Functional connectivity; Macroscale gradients; Thalamocortical hierarchy; Thalamus; Spatial representations

Funding

  1. Key Project of Research and Development of Ministry of Science and Technology [2018AAA0100705]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [61871077, 61533006, U1808204]
  3. Sichuan Science and Technology Program [2018TJPT0016]

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The human thalamus is an integrative hub richly connected with cortical networks, involving diverse cognitive functions. Emerging evidence suggests that multiscale structural and functional gradients integrate various in-formation across modalities into an abstract representation. However, the presence of functional gradients in the thalamus and its relationship to structural properties and cognitive functions remain unknown. We estimated the functional gradients of the thalamus in two independent normal cohorts using a novel diffusion embedding analysis. We identified two main axes of the functional connectivity patterns, and examined associations with thalamic anatomy, morphology, intrinsic geometry, and specific behavioral relevance. We found that the domi-nant gradient indicated a lateral/medial axis across the thalamus and captured associations with anatomical nuclei and gray matter volume. The second gradient was an anterior/posterior axis and provided a behavioral characterization from lower level perception to higher level cognition. Furthermore, these two gradients strongly correlated with spatial distance, indicating the prominence of intrinsic geometry in functional hierarchies. These findings were replicated in an independent dataset. Overall, our findings suggested that macroscale gradients showed a coordination of structural and functional interactions, with hierarchical organization contributing to behavior characterization.

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