Temporal fingerprints of cortical gyrification in marmosets and humans

Author:

Wang Qiyu12ORCID,Zhao Shijie13,Liu Tianming4,Han Junwei1ORCID,Liu Cirong2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern Polytechnical University School of Automation, , Xi'an 710072 , China

2. Chinese Academy of Sciences CAS Center for Excellence in Brain Science and Intelligence Technology, Institute of Neuroscience, , Shanghai 200031 , China

3. Research & Development Institute of Northwestern Polytechnical University in Shenzhen , Shenzhen 518063 , China

4. The University of Georgia Cortical Architecture Imaging and Discovery Lab, Department of Computer Science and Bioimaging Research Center, , Athens, GA 30602 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Recent neuroimaging studies in humans have reported distinct temporal dynamics of gyri and sulci, which may be associated with putative functions of cortical gyrification. However, the complex folding patterns of the human cortex make it difficult to explain temporal patterns of gyrification. In this study, we used the common marmoset as a simplified model to examine the temporal characteristics and compare them with the complex gyrification of humans. Using a brain-inspired deep neural network, we obtained reliable temporal-frequency fingerprints of gyri and sulci from the awake rs-fMRI data of marmosets and humans. Notably, the temporal fingerprints of one region successfully classified the gyrus/sulcus of another region in both marmosets and humans. Additionally, the temporal-frequency fingerprints were remarkably similar in both species. We then analyzed the resulting fingerprints in several domains and adopted the Wavelet Transform Coherence approach to characterize the gyro-sulcal coupling patterns. In both humans and marmosets, sulci exhibited higher frequency bands than gyri, and the two were temporally coupled within the same range of phase angles. This study supports the notion that gyri and sulci possess unique and evolutionarily conserved features that are consistent across functional areas, and advances our understanding of the functional role of cortical gyrification.

Funder

ShenzhenScience and Technology Program

Science and Technology Support Project of Guizhou Province

Guangdong Basic and Applied Basic Research Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shanghai Municipal Science and Technology Major Project

Lingang Laboratory Grant

National Science and Technology Innovation 2030 Major Program of China

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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