Network Neuroscience (Jan 2021)

Structure-informed functional connectivity driven by identifiable and state-specific control regions

  • Benjamin Chiêm,
  • Frédéric Crevecoeur,
  • Jean-Charles Delvenne

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1162/netn_a_00192
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
pp. 591 – 613

Abstract

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AbstractDescribing how the brain anatomical wiring contributes to the emergence of coordinated neural activity underlying complex behavior remains challenging. Indeed, patterns of remote coactivations that adjust with the ongoing task-demand do not systematically match direct, static anatomical links. Here, we propose that observed coactivation patterns, known as functional connectivity (FC), can be explained by a controllable linear diffusion dynamics defined on the brain architecture. Our model, termed structure-informed FC, is based on the hypothesis that different sets of brain regions controlling the information flow on the anatomical wiring produce state-specific functional patterns. We thus introduce a principled framework for the identification of potential control centers in the brain. We find that well-defined, sparse, and robust sets of control regions, partially overlapping across several tasks and resting state, produce FC patterns comparable to empirical ones. Our findings suggest that controllability is a fundamental feature allowing the brain to reach different states.