A functional parcellation of the whole brain in high-functioning individuals with autism spectrum disorder reveals atypical patterns of network organization.

Mol Psychiatry

Section on Cognitive Neuropsychology, Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.

Published: September 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • * They found that ASD individuals displayed atypical functional network patterns, specifically in the stability of connectivity across brain regions, weaker differentiation of specific brain areas, and unusual integration of subcortical structures with the neocortex.
  • * The findings suggest that individuals with ASD have distinct brain connectivity patterns that differ from typically developing individuals, highlighting how their brain networks may function differently.

Article Abstract

Researchers studying autism spectrum disorder (ASD) lack a comprehensive map of the functional network topography in the ASD brain. We used high-quality resting state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) connectivity data and a robust parcellation routine to provide a whole-brain map of functional networks in a group of seventy high-functioning individuals with ASD and a group of seventy typically developing (TD) individuals. The rs-fMRI data were collected using an imaging sequence optimized to achieve high temporal signal-to-noise ratio (tSNR) across the whole-brain. We identified functional networks using a parcellation routine that intrinsically incorporates internal consistency and repeatability of the networks by keeping only network distinctions that agree across halves of the data over multiple random iterations in each group. The groups were tightly matched on tSNR, in-scanner motion, age, and IQ. We compared the maps from each group and found that functional networks in the ASD group are atypical in three seemingly related ways: (1) whole-brain connectivity patterns are less stable across voxels within multiple functional networks, (2) the cerebellum, subcortex, and hippocampus show weaker differentiation of functional subnetworks, and (3) subcortical structures and the hippocampus are atypically integrated with the neocortex. These results were statistically robust and suggest that patterns of network connectivity between the neocortex and the cerebellum, subcortical structures, and hippocampus are atypical in ASD individuals.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41380-024-02764-6DOI Listing

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