Imaging Genetics Center, Mark and Mary Stevens Neuroimaging and Informatics Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, Marina del Rey, California, USA.
Orygen, Parkville, Australia.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2022 Jan;43(1):15-22. doi: 10.1002/hbm.25672. Epub 2021 Oct 6.
This Special Issue of Human Brain Mapping is dedicated to a 10-year anniversary of the Enhancing NeuroImaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA) Consortium. It reports updates from a broad range of international neuroimaging projects that pool data from around the world to answer fundamental questions in neuroscience. Since ENIGMA was formed in December 2009, the initiative grew into a worldwide effort with over 2,000 participating scientists from 45 countries, and over 50 working groups leading large-scale studies of human brain disorders. Over the last decade, many lessons were learned on how best to pool brain data from diverse sources. Working groups were created to develop methods to analyze worldwide data from anatomical and diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), resting state and task-based functional MRI, electroencephalography (EEG), magnetoencephalography (MEG), and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). The quest to understand genetic effects on human brain development and disease also led to analyses of brain scans on an unprecedented scale. Genetic roadmaps of the human cortex were created by researchers worldwide who collaborated to perform statistically well-powered analyses of common and rare genetic variants on brain measures and rates of brain development and aging. Here, we summarize the 31 papers in this Special Issue, covering: (a) technical approaches to harmonize analysis of different types of brain imaging data, (b) reviews of the last decade of work by several of ENIGMA's clinical and technical working groups, and (c) new empirical papers reporting large-scale international brain mapping analyses in patients with substance use disorders, schizophrenia, bipolar disorders, major depression, posttraumatic stress disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, epilepsy, and stroke.
本期《人类大脑图谱》特刊是为了纪念增强神经影像学遗传学的荟萃分析(ENIGMA)联盟成立十周年而设立的。它报告了来自广泛的国际神经影像学项目的最新进展,这些项目汇集了来自世界各地的数据,旨在回答神经科学中的基本问题。自 2009 年 12 月 ENIGMA 成立以来,该倡议发展成为一项全球性的努力,来自 45 个国家的 2000 多名参与科学家,以及 50 多个工作组领导着人类大脑疾病的大规模研究。在过去的十年中,我们从不同来源汇集大脑数据方面学到了很多经验。成立了工作组来开发分析来自解剖和弥散磁共振成像(MRI)、静息状态和任务功能 MRI、脑电图(EEG)、脑磁图(MEG)和磁共振波谱(MRS)的全球数据的方法。为了了解遗传对人类大脑发育和疾病的影响,研究人员还对大脑扫描进行了前所未有的分析。全球研究人员创建了人类皮质的遗传图谱,他们合作对大脑测量值、大脑发育和衰老的常见和罕见遗传变异进行了统计学上有力的分析。在这里,我们总结了本期特刊中的 31 篇论文,涵盖了:(a)协调不同类型脑成像数据分析的技术方法,(b)ENIGMA 的几个临床和技术工作组过去十年工作的回顾,以及(c)报告物质使用障碍、精神分裂症、双相情感障碍、重度抑郁症、创伤后应激障碍、强迫症、癫痫和中风患者的大规模国际大脑映射分析的新实证论文。