Challenges and future directions for representations of functional brain organization

被引:0
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作者
Janine Bijsterbosch
Samuel J. Harrison
Saad Jbabdi
Mark Woolrich
Christian Beckmann
Stephen Smith
Eugene P. Duff
机构
[1] Washington University in St Louis,Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology
[2] University of Oxford. John Radcliffe Hospital,Centre for Functional MRI of the Brain (FMRIB), Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences
[3] University of Zurich & ETH Zurich,Translational Neuromodeling Unit
[4] University of Oxford,Oxford Centre for Human Brain Activity (OHBA), Wellcome Centre for Integrative Neuroimaging, Department of Psychiatry
[5] Warneford Hospital,Donders Institute and Department of Cognitive Neurosciences
[6] Radboud University Medical Centre,Department of Paediatrics
[7] University of Oxford,undefined
[8] John Radcliffe Hospital,undefined
来源
Nature Neuroscience | 2020年 / 23卷
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摘要
A key principle of brain organization is the functional integration of brain regions into interconnected networks. Functional MRI scans acquired at rest offer insights into functional integration via patterns of coherent fluctuations in spontaneous activity, known as functional connectivity. These patterns have been studied intensively and have been linked to cognition and disease. However, the field is fractionated. Diverging analysis approaches have segregated the community into research silos, limiting the replication and clinical translation of findings. A primary source of this fractionation is the diversity of approaches used to reduce complex brain data into a lower-dimensional set of features for analysis and interpretation, which we refer to as brain representations. In this Primer, we provide an overview of different brain representations, lay out the challenges that have led to the fractionation of the field and that continue to form obstacles for convergence, and propose concrete guidelines to unite the field.
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页码:1484 / 1495
页数:11
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