Functional connectivity hemispheric contrast (FC-HC): A new metric for language mapping
•FC-HC uses RS-fMRI to identify the language network including laterality.•FC-HC is reliable across differing populations and image acquisition parameters.•Patient group FC-HC maps were bilateral, healthy groups’ maps were left lateralized. Development of a task-free method for presurgical mapping o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | NeuroImage clinical 2021-01, Vol.30, p.102598-102598, Article 102598 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •FC-HC uses RS-fMRI to identify the language network including laterality.•FC-HC is reliable across differing populations and image acquisition parameters.•Patient group FC-HC maps were bilateral, healthy groups’ maps were left lateralized.
Development of a task-free method for presurgical mapping of language function is important for use in young or cognitively impaired patients. Resting state connectivity fMRI (RS-fMRI) is a task-free method that may be used to identify cognitive networks. We developed a voxelwise RS-fMRI metric, Functional Connectivity Hemispheric Contrast (FC-HC), to map the language network and determine language laterality through comparison of within-hemispheric language network connections (Integration) to cross-hemispheric connections (Segregation). For the first time, we demonstrated robustness and efficacy of a RS-fMRI metric to map language networks across five groups (total N = 243) that differed in MRI scanning parameters, fMRI scanning protocols, age, and development (typical vs pediatric epilepsy). The resting state FC-HC maps for the healthy pediatric and adult groups showed higher values in the left hemisphere, and had high agreement with standard task language fMRI; in contrast, the epilepsy patient group map was bilateral. FC-HC has strong but not perfect agreement with task fMRI and thus, may reflect related and complementary information about language plasticity and compensation. |
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ISSN: | 2213-1582 2213-1582 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.nicl.2021.102598 |