Individual connectivity-based parcellations reflect functional properties of human auditory cortex

Author:

Hakonen M.ORCID,Dahmani L.ORCID,Lankinen K.ORCID,Ren J.ORCID,Barbaro J.,Blazejewska A.ORCID,Cui W.,Kotlarz P.ORCID,Li M.,Polimeni J. R.ORCID,Turpin T.ORCID,Uluç I,Wang D.,Liu H.ORCID,Ahveninen J.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractNeuroimaging studies of the functional organization of human auditory cortex have focused on group-level analyses to identify tendencies that represent the typical brain. Here, we mapped auditory areas of the human superior temporal cortex (STC) in 30 participants by combining functional network analysis and 1-mm isotropic resolution 7T functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Two resting-state fMRI sessions, and one or two auditory and audiovisual speech localizer sessions, were collected on 3–4 separate days. We generated a set of functional network-based parcellations from these data. Solutions with 4, 6, and 11 networks were selected for closer examination based on local maxima of Dice and Silhouette values. The resulting parcellation of auditory cortices showed high intraindividual reproducibility both between resting state sessions (Dice coefficient: 69–78%) and between resting state and task sessions (Dice coefficient: 62– 73%). This demonstrates that auditory areas in STC can be reliably segmented into functional subareas. The interindividual variability was significantly larger than intraindividual variability (Dice coefficient: 57%–68%, p<0.001), indicating that the parcellations also captured meaningful interindividual variability. The individual-specific parcellations yielded the highest alignment with task response topographies, suggesting that individual variability in parcellations reflects individual variability in auditory function. Furthermore, connectional homogeneity within networks was highest for the individual-specific parcellations. Our findings suggest that individual-level parcellations capture meaningful idiosyncrasies in auditory cortex organization.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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