Performing group-level functional image analyses based on homologous functional regions mapped in individuals

Li, Meiling and Wang, Danhong and Ren, Jianxun and Langs, Georg and Stoecklein, Sophia and Brennan, Brian P. and Lu, Jie and Chen, Huafu and Liu, Hesheng and Rushworth, Matthew (2019) Performing group-level functional image analyses based on homologous functional regions mapped in individuals. PLOS Biology, 17 (3). e2007032. ISSN 1545-7885

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Abstract

Functional MRI (fMRI) studies have traditionally relied on intersubject normalization based on global brain morphology, which cannot establish proper functional correspondence between subjects due to substantial intersubject variability in functional organization. Here, we reliably identified a set of discrete, homologous functional regions in individuals to improve intersubject alignment of fMRI data. These functional regions demonstrated marked intersubject variability in size, position, and connectivity. We found that previously reported intersubject variability in functional connectivity maps could be partially explained by variability in size and position of the functional regions. Importantly, individual differences in network topography are associated with individual differences in task-evoked activations, suggesting that these individually specified regions may serve as the “localizer” to improve the alignment of task-fMRI data. We demonstrated that aligning task-fMRI data using the regions derived from resting state fMRI may lead to increased statistical power of task-fMRI analyses. In addition, resting state functional connectivity among these homologous regions is able to capture the idiosyncrasies of subjects and better predict fluid intelligence (gF) than connectivity measures derived from group-level brain atlases. Critically, we showed that not only the connectivity but also the size and position of functional regions are related to human behavior. Collectively, these findings suggest that identifying homologous functional regions across individuals can benefit a wide range of studies in the investigation of connectivity, task activation, and brain-behavior associations.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Digital Academic Press > Biological Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@digiacademicpress.org
Date Deposited: 18 Jan 2023 12:28
Last Modified: 29 Mar 2025 12:59
URI: http://core.ms4sub.com/id/eprint/44

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