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Title: | The human cortex possesses a reconfigurable dynamic network architecture that is disrupted in psychosis | Authors: | Reinen, J.M Chén, O.Y Hutchison, R.M Yeo, B.T.T Anderson, K.M Sabuncu, M.R Öngür, D Roffman, J.L Smoller, J.W Baker, J.T Holmes, A.J |
Keywords: | abnormality brain cognition nervous system disorder neurology adult Article bipolar disorder brain cortex cognition comparative study controlled study delusion dynamics female functional connectivity hallucination human major clinical study male mental disease prediction psychosis resting state network schizophrenia adolescent brain cortex brain mapping diagnostic imaging nerve tract pathophysiology young adult Adolescent Adult Bipolar Disorder Brain Mapping Cerebral Cortex Cognition Female Humans Male Neural Pathways Schizophrenia Young Adult |
Issue Date: | 2018 | Publisher: | Nature Publishing Group | Citation: | Reinen, J.M, Chén, O.Y, Hutchison, R.M, Yeo, B.T.T, Anderson, K.M, Sabuncu, M.R, Öngür, D, Roffman, J.L, Smoller, J.W, Baker, J.T, Holmes, A.J (2018). The human cortex possesses a reconfigurable dynamic network architecture that is disrupted in psychosis. Nature Communications 9 (1) : 1157. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03462-y | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International | Abstract: | Higher-order cognition emerges through the flexible interactions of large-scale brain networks, an aspect of temporal coordination that may be impaired in psychosis. Here, we map the dynamic functional architecture of the cerebral cortex in healthy young adults, leveraging this atlas of transient network configurations (states), to identify state- and network-specific disruptions in patients with schizophrenia and psychotic bipolar disorder. We demonstrate that dynamic connectivity profiles are reliable within participants, and can act as a fingerprint, identifying specific individuals within a larger group. Patients with psychotic illness exhibit intermittent disruptions within cortical networks previously associated with the disease, and the individual connectivity profiles within specific brain states predict the presence of active psychotic symptoms. Taken together, these results provide evidence for a reconfigurable dynamic architecture in the general population and suggest that prior reports of network disruptions in psychosis may reflect symptom-relevant transient abnormalities, rather than a time-invariant global deficit. © 2018 The Author(s). | Source Title: | Nature Communications | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/178421 | ISSN: | 2041-1723 | DOI: | 10.1038/s41467-018-03462-y | Rights: | Attribution 4.0 International |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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