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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

A parsimonious description of global functional brain organization in three spatiotemporal patterns

Taylor Bolt

Dr

Emory University

Schedule
Friday, September 23, 2022

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Schedule

Saturday, September 24, 2022

3:00 AM Australia/Sydney

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Host: Sydney Systems Neuroscience and Complexity SNAC

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

Sydney Systems Neuroscience and Complexity SNAC

Duration

60 minutes

Abstract

Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has yielded seemingly disparate insights into large-scale organization of the human brain. The brain’s large-scale organization can be divided into two broad categories: zero-lag representations of functional connectivity structure and time-lag representations of traveling wave or propagation structure. In this study, we sought to unify observed phenomena across these two categories in the form of three low-frequency spatiotemporal patterns composed of a mixture of standing and traveling wave dynamics. We showed that a range of empirical phenomena, including functional connectivity gradients, the task-positive/task-negative anti-correlation pattern, the global signal, time-lag propagation patterns, the quasiperiodic pattern and the functional connectome network structure, are manifestations of these three spatiotemporal patterns. These patterns account for much of the global spatial structure that underlies functional connectivity analyses and unifies phenomena in resting-state functional MRI previously thought distinct.

Topics

complexconnectivity gradientsfMRIfunctional connectivityfunctional connectomeglobal signallow-dimensionalresting-state fMRIspatiotemporal patternsstanding wavetask-positive/task-negativetraveling wave

About the Speaker

Taylor Bolt

Dr

Emory University

Contact & Resources

No additional contact information available

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