Abstract
Neuroanatomists have established that the various gross structures of the brain are divided into a large number of different processing regions and have catalogued a large number of connections between these regions. The connectional data derived from neuroanatomical studies are complex, and reliable conclusions about the organization of brain systems cannot be drawn from considering them without some supporting analysis. Recognition of this problem has recently led to the application of a variety of techniques to the analysis of connection data. One of the techniques that we previously employed, nonmetric multidimensional scaling (nmds), appears to have revealed important aspects of the organization of the central nervous system, such as the gross organization of the whole cortical network in two species. We present here a detailed treatment of methodological aspects of the application of nmds to connection data. We first examine in detail the particular properties of neuroanatomical connection data. Second, we consider the details of nmds and discuss the propriety of different possible nmds approaches. Third, we present results of the analyses of connection data from the primate visual system, and discuss their interpretation. Fourth, we study independent analyses of the organization of the visual system, and examine the relation between the results of these analyses and those from nmds. Fifth, we investigate quantitatively the performance of a number of data transformation and conditioning procedures, as well as tied and untied nmds analysis of untransformed low-level data, to determine how well nmds can recover known metric parameters from artificial data. We then re-analyse real connectivity data with the most successful methods at removing the effects of sparsity, to ensure that this aspect of data structure does not obscure others. Finally, we summarize the evidence on the connectional organization of the primate visual system, and discuss the reliability of nmds analyses of neuroanatomical connection data.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Reference72 articles.
1. Cortical and subcortical afferents to the amygdala of the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta)
2. Amygdalo-cortical projections in the monkey ( fascicularis) comp;Amaral D.G.;Neurol.,1984
3. Architectonic and connectional organization of ventral and dorsal prefrontal areas in the rhesus monkey;Barbas H.;Epilepsia,1988
4. Visual and auditory association areas of the cat's posterior ectosylvian gyrus: cortical afferents. J. comp;Bowman E.M .;Neurol.,1988
5. Posterior parietal cortex in Rhesus monkey: I. Parcellation of areas based on distinctive limbic and sensory corticocortical connections. J. comp;Cavada C.;Neurol.,1989
Cited by
71 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献