Authors
Leonardo L Gollo, Andrew Zalesky, R Matthew Hutchison, Martijn Van Den Heuvel, Michael Breakspear
Publication date
2015/5/19
Journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
370
Issue
1668
Pages
20140165
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
For more than a century, cerebral cartography has been driven by investigations of structural and morphological properties of the brain across spatial scales and the temporal/functional phenomena that emerge from these underlying features. The next era of brain mapping will be driven by studies that consider both of these components of brain organization simultaneously—elucidating their interactions and dependencies. Using this guiding principle, we explored the origin of slowly fluctuating patterns of synchronization within the topological core of brain regions known as the rich club, implicated in the regulation of mood and introspection. We find that a constellation of densely interconnected regions that constitute the rich club (including the anterior insula, amygdala and precuneus) play a central role in promoting a stable, dynamical core of spontaneous activity in the primate cortex. The slow timescales are well …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
LL Gollo, A Zalesky, RM Hutchison, M Van Den Heuvel… - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2015