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Crystallinity Characterization White Matter

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailablePhysics of Life

Crystallinity characterization of white matter in the human brain

Erin Teich

Dr.

University of Pennsylvania

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Sunday, May 8, 2022

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Sunday, May 8, 2022

9:00 AM America/Los_Angeles

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Host: SLAAM by UC Merced

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Abstract

White matter microstructure underpins cognition and function in the human brain through the facilitation of neuronal communication, and the non-invasive characterization of this structure remains an elusive goal in the neuroscience community. Efforts to assess white matter microstructure are hampered by the sheer amount of information needed for characterization. Current techniques address this problem by representing white matter features with single scalars that are often not easy to interpret. Here, we address these issues by introducing tools from soft matter for the characterization of white matter microstructure. We investigate structure on a mesoscopic scale by analyzing its homogeneity and determining which regions of the brain are structurally homogeneous, or ``crystalline" in the context of materials science. We find that crystallinity is a reliable metric that varies across the brain along interpretable lines of anatomical difference. We also parcellate white matter into ``crystal grains," or contiguous sets of voxels of high structural similarity, and find overlap with other white matter parcellations. Our results provide new means of assessing white matter microstructure on multiple length scales, and open new avenues of future inquiry.

Topics

anatomical differencescrystal grainscrystallinitymesoscopic scalemicrostructureneuronal communicationstructural homogeneityvoxel analysiswhite matter

About the Speaker

Erin Teich

Dr.

University of Pennsylvania

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