Frontiers in Cellular Neuroscience (Oct 2018)

Prominent Changes in Cerebro-Cerebellar Functional Connectivity During Continuous Cognitive Processing

  • Gloria Castellazzi,
  • Gloria Castellazzi,
  • Gloria Castellazzi,
  • Stefania D. Bruno,
  • Ahmed T. Toosy,
  • Letizia Casiraghi,
  • Letizia Casiraghi,
  • Fulvia Palesi,
  • Giovanni Savini,
  • Giovanni Savini,
  • Egidio D’Angelo,
  • Egidio D’Angelo,
  • Claudia Angela Michela Gandini Wheeler-Kingshott,
  • Claudia Angela Michela Gandini Wheeler-Kingshott,
  • Claudia Angela Michela Gandini Wheeler-Kingshott

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fncel.2018.00331
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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While task-dependent responses of specific brain areas during cognitive tasks are well established, much less is known about the changes occurring in resting state networks (RSNs) in relation to continuous cognitive processing. In particular, the functional involvement of cerebro-cerebellar loops connecting the posterior cerebellum to associative cortices, remains unclear. In this study, 22 healthy volunteers underwent a multi-session functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) protocol composed of four consecutive 8-min resting state fMRI (rs-fMRI) scans. After a first control scan, participants listened to a narrated story for the entire duration of the second rs-fMRI scan; two further rs-fMRI scans followed the end of story listening. The story plot was purposely designed to stimulate specific cognitive processes that are known to involve the cerebro-cerebellar loops. Almost all of the identified 15 RSNs showed changes in functional connectivity (FC) during and for several minutes after the story. The FC changes mainly occurred in the frontal and prefrontal cortices and in the posterior cerebellum, especially in Crus I-II and lobule VI. The FC changes occurred in cerebellar clusters belonging to different RSNs, including the cerebellar network (CBLN), sensory networks (lateral visual network, LVN; medial visual network, MVN) and cognitive networks (default mode network, DMN; executive control network, ECN; right and left ventral attention networks, RVAN and LVAN; salience network, SN; language network, LN; and working memory network, WMN). Interestingly, a k-means analysis of FC changes revealed clustering of FCN, ECN, and WMN, which are all involved in working memory functions, CBLN, DMN, and SN, which play a key-role in attention switching, and RSNs involved in visual imagery. These results show that the cerebellum is deeply entrained in well-structured network clusters, which reflect multiple aspects of cognitive processing, during and beyond the conclusion of auditory stimulation.

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