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Changes in structural and functional connectivity among resting-state networks across the human lifespan
Betzel, Richard F.1; Byrge, Lisa1; He, Ye2; Goni, Joaquin1; Zuo, Xi-Nian2; Sporns, Olaf1
摘要At rest, the brain's sensorimotor and higher cognitive systems engage in organized patterns of correlated activity forming resting-state networks. An important empirical question is how functional connectivity and structural connectivity within and between resting-state networks change with age. In this study we use network modeling techniques to identify significant changes in network organization across the human lifespan. The results of this study demonstrate that whole-brain functional and structural connectivity both exhibit reorganization with age. On average, functional connections within resting-state networks weaken in magnitude while connections between resting-state networks tend to increase. These changes can be localized to a small subset of functional connections that exhibit systematic changes across the lifespan. Collectively, changes in functional connectivity are also manifest at a system-wide level, as components of the control, default mode, saliency/ventral attention, dorsal attention, and visual networks become less functionally cohesive, as evidenced by decreased component modularity. Paralleling this functional reorganization is a decrease in the density and weight of anatomical white-matter connections. Hub regions are particularly affected by these changes, and the capacity of those regions to communicate with other regions exhibits a lifelong pattern of decline. Finally, the relationship between functional connectivity and structural connectivity also appears to change with age; functional connectivity along multi-step structural paths tends to be stronger in older subjects than in younger subjects. Overall, our analysis points to age-related changes in inter-regional communication unfolding within and between resting-state networks. (c) 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
关键词Connectome Functional Connectivity Lifespan Modularity
2014-11-15
语种英语
发表期刊NEUROIMAGE
ISSN1053-8119
卷号102期号:2页码:345-357
期刊论文类型Article
收录类别SCI
WOS记录号WOS:000345391700010
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被引频次:593[WOS]   [WOS记录]     [WOS相关记录]
文献类型期刊论文
条目标识符https://ir.psych.ac.cn/handle/311026/14167
专题中国科学院行为科学重点实验室
作者单位1.Indiana Univ, Bloomington, IN 47405 USA
2.Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Psychol, Key Lab Behav Sci & Magnet Resonance Imaging Res, Beijing 100101, Peoples R China
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Betzel, Richard F.,Byrge, Lisa,He, Ye,et al. Changes in structural and functional connectivity among resting-state networks across the human lifespan[J]. NEUROIMAGE,2014,102(2):345-357.
APA Betzel, Richard F.,Byrge, Lisa,He, Ye,Goni, Joaquin,Zuo, Xi-Nian,&Sporns, Olaf.(2014).Changes in structural and functional connectivity among resting-state networks across the human lifespan.NEUROIMAGE,102(2),345-357.
MLA Betzel, Richard F.,et al."Changes in structural and functional connectivity among resting-state networks across the human lifespan".NEUROIMAGE 102.2(2014):345-357.
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