Spontaneous eye movements during eyes-open rest reduce resting-state-network modularity by increasing visual-sensorimotor connectivity
During wakeful rest, individuals make small eye movements during fixation. We examined how these endogenously driven oculomotor patterns impact topography and topology of functional brain networks. We used a dataset consisting of eyes-open resting-state (RS) fMRI data with simultaneous eye tracking....
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Veröffentlicht in: | Network neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.) Mass.), 2021-01, Vol.5 (2), p.451-476 |
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Zusammenfassung: | During wakeful rest, individuals make small eye movements during fixation. We
examined how these endogenously driven oculomotor patterns impact topography and
topology of functional brain networks. We used a dataset consisting of eyes-open
resting-state (RS) fMRI data with simultaneous eye tracking. The eye-tracking
data indicated minor movements during rest, which correlated modestly with RS
BOLD data. However, eye-tracking data correlated well with echo-planar imaging
time series sampled from the area of the eye-orbit (EO-EPI), which is a signal
previously used to identify eye movements during exogenous saccades and movie
viewing. Further analyses showed that EO-EPI data were correlated with activity
in an extensive motor and sensorimotor network, including components of the
dorsal attention network and the frontal eye fields. Partialling out variance
related to EO-EPI from RS data reduced connectivity, primarily between
sensorimotor and visual areas. It also produced networks with higher modularity,
lower mean connectivity strength, and lower mean clustering coefficient. Our
results highlight new aspects of endogenous eye movement control during wakeful
rest. They show that oculomotor-related contributions form an important
component of RS network topology, and that those should be considered in
interpreting differences in network structure between populations or as a
function of different experimental conditions.
We studied how subtle eye movements made during fixation, in absence of any other
task, are related to resting-state connectivity measured using fMRI. We used a
dataset for which eye tracking and BOLD resting-state were acquired
simultaneously. We correlated brain activity with both eye-tracking metrics as
well as time series sampled from the area of the eye orbits (EO-EPI).
Eye-tracking data correlated well with the EO-EPI data. Furthermore, EO-EPI
correlated with BOLD signal in sensorimotor and visual brain systems. Removing
variance related to EO-EPI reduced connectivity between sensorimotor and visual
areas and resulted in more modular resting-state networks. Our findings show
that oculomotor-related contributions are an important component of
resting-state network topology, and that they can be studied using EPI data from
the eye orbits. |
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ISSN: | 2472-1751 2472-1751 |
DOI: | 10.1162/netn_a_00186 |