Gyral peaks and patterns in human brains

Author:

Zhang Songyao1ORCID,Zhang Tuo1ORCID,He Zhibin1,Li Xiao2,Zhang Lu3,Zhu Dajiang3,Jiang Xi4,Liu Tianming5,Han Junwei1ORCID,Guo Lei1

Affiliation:

1. Northwestern Polytechnical University School of Automation, School of Information Technology, and School of Life Science and Technology, , Xi’an 710000 , China

2. Northwest University School of Automation, School of Information Technology, and School of Life Science and Technology, , Xi’an , China

3. The University of Texas at Arlington Department of Computer Science and Engineering, , Arlington, TX , United States

4. University of Electronic Science and Technology of China School of Automation, School of Information Technology, and School of Life Science and Technology, , Chengdu , China

5. The University of Georgia Cortical Architecture Imaging and Discovery Lab, Department of Computer Science and Bioimaging Research Center, , Athens, GA 30605 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Cortical folding patterns are related to brain function, cognition, and behavior. Since the relationship has not been fully explained on a coarse scale, many efforts have been devoted to the identification of finer grained cortical landmarks, such as sulcal pits and gyral peaks, which were found to remain invariant across subjects and ages and the invariance may be related to gene mediated proto-map. However, gyral peaks were only investigated on macaque monkey brains, but not on human brains where the investigation is challenged due to high inter-individual variabilities. To this end, in this work, we successfully identified 96 gyral peaks both on the left and right hemispheres of human brains, respectively. These peaks are spatially consistent across individuals. Higher or sharper peaks are more consistent across subjects. Both structural and functional graph metrics of peaks are significantly different from other cortical regions, and more importantly, these nodal graph metrics are anti-correlated with the spatial consistency metrics within peaks. In addition, the distribution of peaks and various cortical anatomical, structural/functional connective features show hemispheric symmetry. These findings provide new clues to understanding the cortical landmarks, as well as their relationship with brain functions, cognition, behavior in both healthy and aberrant brains.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Sichuan Science and Technology Program

Innovation Foundation for Doctor Dissertation of Northwestern Polytechnical University

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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