4.7 Article

The modular organization of brain cortical connectivity across the human lifespan

期刊

NEUROIMAGE
卷 218, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.116974

关键词

Connectome; Lifespan; Multilayer networks; Modularity

资金

  1. Grant Avvio alla ricerca 2018 [AR1181643680C682]
  2. University of Rome La Sapienza
  3. Progetti di Ateneo 2017 [RM11715C82606455]
  4. Progetti di Ateneo 2018 [RP11816436CDA44C]
  5. Progetti di Ateneo 2019 [RM11916B88C3E2DE]
  6. NIH/NIMH [1R01MH12295701, 1R01AT009036, 1R01MH122957]
  7. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [1342962]
  8. Indiana University Office of the Vice President for Research Emerging Area of Research Initiative, Learning: Brains, Machine and Children

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The network architecture of the human brain contributes in shaping neural activity, influencing cognitive and behavioral processes. The availability of neuroimaging data across the lifespan allows us to monitor how this architecture reorganizes, influenced by processes like learning, adaptation, maturation, and senescence. Changing patterns in brain connectivity can be analyzed with the tools of network science, which can be used to reveal organizational principles such as modular network topology. The identification of network modules is funda-mental, as they parse the brain into coherent sub-systems and allow for both functional integration and segre-gation among different brain areas. In this work we examined the brains modular organization by developing an ensemble-based multilayer network approach, allowing us to link changes of structural connectivity patterns to development and aging. We show that modular structure exhibits both linear and nonlinear age-related trends. In the early and late lifespan, communities are more modular, and we track the origins of this high modularity to two different substrates in brain connectivity, linked to the number and the weights of the intra-clusters edges. We also demonstrate that aging leads to a progressive and increasing reconfiguration of modules and a redistribution across hemispheres. Finally, we identify those brain regions that most contribute to network reconfiguration and those that remain more stable across the lifespan.

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