Distinct modes of functional connectivity induced by movie-watching

A fundamental question in systems neuroscience is how endogenous neuronal activity self-organizes during particular brain states. Recent neuroimaging studies have demonstrated systematic relationships between resting-state and task-induced functional connectivity (FC). In particular, continuous task...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Fla.), 2019-01, Vol.184, p.335-348
Hauptverfasser: Demirtaş, Murat, Ponce-Alvarez, Adrian, Gilson, Matthieu, Hagmann, Patric, Mantini, Dante, Betti, Viviana, Romani, Gian Luca, Friston, Karl, Corbetta, Maurizio, Deco, Gustavo
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A fundamental question in systems neuroscience is how endogenous neuronal activity self-organizes during particular brain states. Recent neuroimaging studies have demonstrated systematic relationships between resting-state and task-induced functional connectivity (FC). In particular, continuous task studies, such as movie watching, speak to alterations in coupling among cortical regions and enhanced fluctuations in FC compared to the resting-state. This suggests that FC may reflect systematic and large-scale reorganization of functionally integrated responses while subjects are watching movies. In this study, we characterized fluctuations in FC during resting-state and movie-watching conditions. We found that the FC patterns induced systematically by movie-watching can be explained with a single principal component. These condition-specific FC fluctuations overlapped with inter-subject synchronization patterns in occipital and temporal brain regions. However, unlike inter-subject synchronization, condition-specific FC patterns were characterized by increased correlations within frontal brain regions and reduced correlations between frontal-parietal brain regions. We investigated these condition-specific functional variations as a shorter time scale, using time-resolved FC. The time-resolved FC showed condition-specificity over time; notably when subjects watched both the same and different movies. To explain self-organisation of global FC through the alterations in local dynamics, we used a large-scale computational model. We found that condition-specific reorganization of FC could be explained by local changes that engendered changes in FC among higher-order association regions, mainly in frontal and parietal cortices. •The variations of functional connectivity during movie-watching condition are explained by a single principal component.•The topography of condition-specific principal component is similar to inter-subject synchronization in occipital and temporal brain regions, but it exhibits distinct patterns expressed in frontal brain regions.•Time-resolved functional connectivity shows that the condition-specific functional states are continuous across time.•A whole-brain computational model shows that the changes in local dynamical properties in higher-order association regions can explain the condition-specific changes in FC.
ISSN:1053-8119
1095-9572
DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.09.042