Author:
Jimenez-Marin Antonio,Diez Ibai,Erramuzpe Asier,Stramaglia Sebastiano,Bonifazi Paolo,Cortes Jesus M
Abstract
ABSTRACTThe human brain is an extremely complex network of structural and functional connections that operate at multiple spatial and temporal scales. Investigating the relationship between these multi-scale connections is critical to advancing our comprehension of brain function and disorders. However, accurately predicting structural connectivity from its functional counterpart remains a challenging pursuit. One of the major impediments is the lack of public repositories that integrate structural and functional networks at diverse resolutions. Addressing this issue, we provide open datasets and code enabling the examination of the correspondence between structural and functional connectivities at different scales. We present a module-level strategy that overcomes region-level approaches in understanding the structure-function correspondence. Moreover, we also provide additional resources focused on neuro-genetic associations of module-level network metrics, which present promising opportunities to further advance research in the field of network neuroscience, particularly concerning brain disorders.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory