Can hubs of the human connectome be identified consistently with diffusion MRI?

Author:

Gajwani Mehul1ORCID,Oldham Stuart12,Pang James C.1,Arnatkevičiūtė Aurina1,Tiego Jeggan1,Bellgrove Mark A.1,Fornito Alex1

Affiliation:

1. The Turner Institute for Brain and Mental Health, School of Psychological Sciences, and Monash Biomedical Imaging, Monash University, Victoria, Australia

2. Developmental Imaging, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute, The Royal Children’s Hospital, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Recent years have seen a surge in the use of diffusion MRI to map connectomes in humans, paralleled by a similar increase in processing and analysis choices. Yet these different steps and their effects are rarely compared systematically. Here, in a healthy young adult population (n = 294), we characterized the impact of a range of analysis pipelines on one widely studied property of the human connectome: its degree distribution. We evaluated the effects of 40 pipelines (comparing common choices of parcellation, streamline seeding, tractography algorithm, and streamline propagation constraint) and 44 group-representative connectome reconstruction schemes on highly connected hub regions. We found that hub location is highly variable between pipelines. The choice of parcellation has a major influence on hub architecture, and hub connectivity is highly correlated with regional surface area in most of the assessed pipelines (ρ > 0.70 in 69% of the pipelines), particularly when using weighted networks. Overall, our results demonstrate the need for prudent decision-making when processing diffusion MRI data, and for carefully considering how different processing choices can influence connectome organization.

Funder

Sylvia and Charles Viertel Charitable Foundation

National Health and Medical Research Council

NHMRC Senior Research Fellowship

Australian Research Council

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications,General Neuroscience

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