Authors
Benjamin A Seitzman, Caterina Gratton, Timothy O Laumann, Evan M Gordon, Babatunde Adeyemo, Ally Dworetsky, Brian T Kraus, Adrian W Gilmore, Jeffrey J Berg, Mario Ortega, Annie Nguyen, Deanna J Greene, Kathleen B McDermott, Steven M Nelson, Christina N Lessov-Schlaggar, Bradley L Schlaggar, Nico UF Dosenbach, Steven E Petersen
Publication date
2019/11/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
116
Issue
45
Pages
22851-22861
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has provided converging descriptions of group-level functional brain organization. Recent work has revealed that functional networks identified in individuals contain local features that differ from the group-level description. We define these features as network variants. Building on these studies, we ask whether distributions of network variants reflect stable, trait-like differences in brain organization. Across several datasets of highly-sampled individuals we show that 1) variants are highly stable within individuals, 2) variants are found in characteristic locations and associate with characteristic functional networks across large groups, 3) task-evoked signals in variants demonstrate a link to functional variation, and 4) individuals cluster into subgroups on the basis of variant characteristics that are related to differences in behavior. These results suggest that …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
BA Seitzman, C Gratton, TO Laumann, EM Gordon… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019