Author
Mantzaris, A
Bassett, D
Wymbs, N
Estrada, E
Porter, M
Mucha, P
Grafton, S
Higham, D
Journal title
Journal of Complex Networks
DOI
10.1093/comnet/cnt001
Issue
1
Volume
1
Last updated
2021-02-05T06:47:11.367+00:00
Page
83-92
Abstract
© The Authors 2013. We study functional activity in the human brain using functional magnetic resonance imaging and recently developed tools from network science. The data arise from the performance of a simple behavioural motor learning task. Unsupervised clustering of subjects with respect to similarity of network activity measured over 3 days of practice produces significant evidence of 'learning', in the sense that subjects typically move between clusters (of subjects whose dynamics are similar) as time progresses. However, the high dimensionality and time-dependent nature of the data makes it difficult to explain which brain regions are driving this distinction. Using network centrality measures that respect the arrow of time, we express the data in an extremely compact form that characterizes the aggregate activity of each brain region in each experiment using a single coefficient, while reproducing information about learning that was discovered using the full data set. This compact summary allows key brain regions contributing to centrality to be visualized and interpreted. We thereby provide a proof of principle for the use of recently proposed dynamic centrality measures on temporal network data in neuroscience.
Symplectic ID
612245
Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
1 June 2013
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