Hierarchical organization of human cortical networks in health and schizophrenia

被引:950
|
作者
Bassett, Danielle S. [1 ,2 ,4 ]
Bullmore, Edward T. [1 ,5 ]
Verchinski, Beth A. [3 ]
Mattay, Venkata S. [3 ]
Weinberger, Daniel R. [2 ]
Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas [2 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Addenbrookes Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Brain Mapping Unit, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, England
[2] NIMH, Clin Brain Disorders Branch, Genes Cognit & Psychosis Program, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[3] NIMH, Neuroimaging Core Facil, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[4] Univ Cambridge, Dept Phys, Biol Soft Syst Sector, Cambridge CB2 1TN, England
[5] Univ Cambridge, Behav & Clin Neurosci Inst, Cambridge CB2 1TN, England
[6] Cent Inst Mental Hlth, D-68072 Mannheim, Germany
来源
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE | 2008年 / 28卷 / 37期
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
anatomy; network; hierarchy; systems; MRI; schizophrenia; neurodevelopment;
D O I
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1929-08.2008
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The complex organization of connectivity in the human brain is incompletely understood. Recently, topological measures based on graph theory have provided a new approach to quantify large-scale cortical networks. These methods have been applied to anatomical connectivity data on nonhuman species, and cortical networks have been shown to have small-world topology, associated with high local and global efficiency of information transfer. Anatomical networks derived from cortical thickness measurements have shown the same organizational properties of the healthy human brain, consistent with similar results reported in functional networks derived from resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and magnetoencephalographic data. Here we show, using anatomical networks derived from analysis of inter-regional covariation of gray matter volume in MRI data on 259 healthy volunteers, that classical divisions of cortex (multimodal, unimodal, and transmodal) have some distinct topological attributes. Although all cortical divisions shared nonrandom properties of small-worldness and efficient wiring (short mean Euclidean distance between connected regions), the multimodal network had a hierarchical organization, dominated by frontal hubs with low clustering, whereas the transmodal network was assortative. Moreover, in a sample of 203 people with schizophrenia, multimodal network organization was abnormal, as indicated by reduced hierarchy, the loss of frontal and the emergence of nonfrontal hubs, and increased connection distance. We propose that the topological differences between divisions of normal cortex may represent the outcome of different growth processes for multimodal and transmodal networks and that neurodevelopmental abnormalities in schizophrenia specifically impact multimodal cortical organization.
引用
收藏
页码:9239 / 9248
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Disruptions of Hierarchical Cortical Organization in Early Psychosis and Schizophrenia
    Holmes, Alexander
    Levi, Priscila T.
    Chen, Yu-Chi
    Chopra, Sidhant
    Aquino, Kevin M.
    Pang, James C.
    Fornito, Alex
    BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY-COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE AND NEUROIMAGING, 2023, 8 (12) : 1240 - 1250
  • [2] The Hierarchical Cortical Organization of Human Speech Processing
    de Heer, Wendy A.
    Huth, Alexander G.
    Griffiths, Thomas L.
    Gallant, Jack L.
    Theunissen, Frederic E.
    JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2017, 37 (27): : 6539 - 6557
  • [3] Hierarchical Genetic Organization of Human Cortical Surface Area
    Chen, Chi-Hua
    Gutierrez, E. D.
    Thompson, Wes
    Panizzon, Matthew S.
    Jernigan, Terry L.
    Eyler, Lisa T.
    Fennema-Notestine, Christine
    Jak, Amy J.
    Neale, Michael C.
    Franz, Carol E.
    Lyons, Michael J.
    Grant, Michael D.
    Fischl, Bruce
    Seidman, Larry J.
    Tsuang, Ming T.
    Kremen, William S.
    Dale, Anders M.
    SCIENCE, 2012, 335 (6076) : 1634 - 1636
  • [4] Hierarchical organization of cortical and thalamic connectivity
    Julie A. Harris
    Stefan Mihalas
    Karla E. Hirokawa
    Jennifer D. Whitesell
    Hannah Choi
    Amy Bernard
    Phillip Bohn
    Shiella Caldejon
    Linzy Casal
    Andrew Cho
    Aaron Feiner
    David Feng
    Nathalie Gaudreault
    Charles R. Gerfen
    Nile Graddis
    Peter A. Groblewski
    Alex M. Henry
    Anh Ho
    Robert Howard
    Joseph E. Knox
    Leonard Kuan
    Xiuli Kuang
    Jerome Lecoq
    Phil Lesnar
    Yaoyao Li
    Jennifer Luviano
    Stephen McConoughey
    Marty T. Mortrud
    Maitham Naeemi
    Lydia Ng
    Seung Wook Oh
    Benjamin Ouellette
    Elise Shen
    Staci A. Sorensen
    Wayne Wakeman
    Quanxin Wang
    Yun Wang
    Ali Williford
    John W. Phillips
    Allan R. Jones
    Christof Koch
    Hongkui Zeng
    Nature, 2019, 575 : 195 - 202
  • [5] Hierarchical organization of cortical and thalamic connectivity
    Harris, Julie A.
    Mihalas, Stefan
    Hirokawa, Karla E.
    Whitesell, Jennifer D.
    Choi, Hannah
    Bernard, Amy
    Bohn, Phillip
    Caldejon, Shiella
    Casal, Linzy
    Cho, Andrew
    Feiner, Aaron
    Feng, David
    Gaudreault, Nathalie
    Gerfen, Charles R.
    Graddis, Nile
    Groblewski, Peter A.
    Henry, Alex M.
    Ho, Anh
    Howard, Robert
    Knox, Joseph E.
    Kuan, Leonard
    Kuang, Xiuli
    Lecoq, Jerome
    Lesnar, Phil
    Li, Yaoyao
    Luviano, Jennifer
    McConoughey, Stephen
    Mortrud, Marty T.
    Naeemi, Maitham
    Ng, Lydia
    Oh, Seung Wook
    Ouellette, Benjamin
    Shen, Elise
    Sorensen, Staci A.
    Wakeman, Wayne
    Wang, Quanxin
    Wang, Yun
    Williford, Ali
    Phillips, John W.
    Jones, Allan R.
    Koch, Christof
    Zeng, Hongkui
    NATURE, 2019, 575 (7781) : 195 - +
  • [6] K-shell decomposition reveals hierarchical cortical organization of the human brain
    Lahav, Nir
    Ksherim, Baruch
    Ben-Simon, Eti
    Maron-Katz, Adi
    Cohen, Reuven
    Havlin, Shlomo
    NEW JOURNAL OF PHYSICS, 2016, 18
  • [7] Hierarchical cortical networks of "voice patches" for processing voices in human brain
    Zhang, Yang
    Ding, Yue
    Huang, Juan
    Zhou, Wenjing
    Ling, Zhipei
    Hong, Bo
    Wang, Xiaoqin
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2021, 118 (52)
  • [8] Hierarchical organization of modularity in complex networks
    Barabási, AL
    Ravasz, E
    Oltvai, Z
    STATISTICAL MECHANICS OF COMPLEX NETWORKS, 2003, 625 : 46 - 65
  • [9] Hierarchical organization of modularity in metabolic networks
    Ravasz, E
    Somera, AL
    Mongru, DA
    Oltvai, ZN
    Barabási, AL
    SCIENCE, 2002, 297 (5586) : 1551 - 1555
  • [10] Hierarchical spatial organization of geographical networks
    Travencolo, Bruno A. N.
    Costa, Luciano da F.
    JOURNAL OF PHYSICS A-MATHEMATICAL AND THEORETICAL, 2008, 41 (22)