Similarity in evoked responses does not imply similarity in macroscopic network states

Author:

Rasero Javier123ORCID,Betzel Richard4ORCID,Sentis Amy Isabella25ORCID,Kraynak Thomas E.56ORCID,Gianaros Peter J.56ORCID,Verstynen Timothy1257ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA

2. Neuroscience Institute, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA

3. School of Data Science, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22902, USA

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

5. Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh and Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA

6. Department of Psychology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA

7. Biomedical Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA

Abstract

Abstract It is commonplace in neuroscience to assume that if two tasks activate the same brain areas in the same way, then they are recruiting the same underlying networks. Yet computational theory has shown that the same pattern of activity can emerge from many different underlying network representations. Here we evaluated whether similarity in activation necessarily implies similarity in network architecture by comparing region-wise activation patterns and functional correlation profiles from a large sample of healthy subjects (N=242) that performed two executive control tasks known to recruit nearly identical brain areas, the color-word Stroop task and the Multi-Source Interference Task (MSIT). Using a measure of instantaneous functional correlations, based on edge time series, we estimated the task-related networks that differed between incongruent and congruent conditions. We found that the two tasks were much more different in their network profiles than in their evoked activity patterns at different analytical levels, as well as for a wide range of methodological pipelines. Our results reject the notion that having the same activation patterns means two tasks engage the same underlying representations, suggesting that task representations should be independently evaluated at both node and edge (connectivity) levels.

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

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

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