Structure–function subsystem model and computational lesions of the central nervous system’s rostral sector (forebrain and midbrain)

Author:

Swanson Larry W.1ORCID,Hahn Joel D.1ORCID,Sporns Olaf23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA 90089

2. Indiana University Network Science Institute, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405

3. Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405

Abstract

The craniote central nervous system has been divided into rostral, intermediate, and caudal sectors, with the rostral sector containing the vertebrate forebrain and midbrain. Here, network science tools were used to create and analyze a rat hierarchical structure–function subsystem model of intrarostral sector neural connectivity between gray matter regions. The hierarchy has 109 bottom-level subsystems and three upper-level subsystems corresponding to voluntary behavior control, cognition, and affect; instinctive survival behaviors and homeostasis; and oculomotor control. As in previous work, subsystems identified based on their coclassification as network communities are revealed as functionally related. We carried out focal perturbations of neural structural connectivity comprehensively by computationally lesioning each region of the network, and the resulting effects on the network’s modular (subsystem) organization were systematically mapped and measured. The pattern of changes was found to be correlated with three structural attributes of the lesioned region: region centrality (degree, strength, and betweenness), region position in the hierarchy, and subsystem distribution of region neural outputs and inputs. As expected, greater region centrality results, on average, in stronger lesion impact and more distributed lesion effects. In addition, our analysis suggests that strongly functionally related regions, belonging to the same bottom-level subsystem, exhibit similar effects after lesioning. These similarities account for coherent patterns of disturbances that align with subsystem boundaries and propagate through the network. These systematic lesion effects and their similarity across functionally related regions are of potential interest for theoretical, experimental, and clinical studies.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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