Stark David E, Margulies Daniel S, Shehzad Zarrar E, Reiss Philip, Kelly A M Clare, Uddin Lucina Q, Gee Dylan G, Roy Amy K, Banich Marie T, Castellanos F Xavier, Milham Michael P
Phyllis Green and Randolph Cōwen Institute for Pediatric Neuroscience at the New York University Child Study Center, New York, New York 10016, USA.
J Neurosci. 2008 Dec 17;28(51):13754-64. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4544-08.2008.
Electrophysiological studies have long demonstrated a high degree of correlated activity between the left and right hemispheres, however little is known about regional variation in this interhemispheric coordination. Whereas cognitive models and neuroanatomical evidence suggest differences in coordination across primary sensory-motor cortices versus higher-order association areas, these have not been characterized. Here, we used resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data acquired from 62 healthy volunteers to examine interregional correlation in spontaneous low-frequency hemodynamic fluctuations. Using a probabilistic atlas, we correlated probability-weighted time series from 112 regions comprising the entire cerebrum. We then examined regional variation in correlated activity between homotopic regions, contrasting primary sensory-motor cortices, unimodal association areas, and heteromodal association areas. Consistent with previous studies, robustly correlated spontaneous activity was noted between all homotopic regions, which was significantly higher than that between nonhomotopic (heterotopic and intrahemispheric) regions. We further demonstrated substantial regional variation in homotopic interhemispheric correlations that was highly consistent across subjects. Specifically, there was a gradient of interhemispheric correlation, with highest correlations across primary sensory-motor cortices (0.758, SD=0.152), significantly lower correlations across unimodal association areas (0.597, SD=0.230) and still lower correlations across heteromodal association areas (0.517, SD=0.226). These results demonstrate functional differences in interhemispheric coordination related to the brain's hierarchical subdivisions. Synchrony across primary cortices may reflect networks engaged in bilateral sensory integration and motor coordination, whereas lower coordination across heteromodal association areas is consistent with functional lateralization of these regions. This novel method of examining interhemispheric coordination may yield insights regarding diverse disease processes as well as healthy development.
长期以来,电生理研究已证明左右半球之间存在高度的相关活动,然而,关于这种半球间协调的区域差异却知之甚少。尽管认知模型和神经解剖学证据表明,初级感觉运动皮层与高阶联合区在协调方面存在差异,但尚未得到具体描述。在这里,我们使用从62名健康志愿者身上获取的静息态功能磁共振成像数据,来研究自发低频血流动力学波动中的区域间相关性。我们使用概率图谱,将包含整个大脑的112个区域的概率加权时间序列进行关联。然后,我们检查了同位区域之间相关活动的区域差异,对比了初级感觉运动皮层、单峰联合区和异峰联合区。与先前的研究一致,我们注意到所有同位区域之间存在强烈的自发活动相关性,这显著高于非同位(异位和半球内)区域之间的相关性。我们进一步证明了同位半球间相关性存在显著的区域差异,且在不同受试者之间高度一致。具体而言,存在半球间相关性梯度,初级感觉运动皮层之间的相关性最高(0.758,标准差=0.152),单峰联合区之间的相关性显著较低(0.597,标准差=0.230),异峰联合区之间的相关性更低(0.517,标准差=0.226)。这些结果表明,与大脑层次细分相关的半球间协调存在功能差异。初级皮层之间的同步性可能反映了参与双侧感觉整合和运动协调的网络,而异峰联合区之间较低的协调性与这些区域的功能侧化一致。这种检查半球间协调的新方法可能会为各种疾病过程以及健康发育提供见解。