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Comparison of diffusion tractography and tract-tracing measures of connectivity strength in rhesus macaque connectome.

Authors :
van den Heuvel MP
de Reus MA
Feldman Barrett L
Scholtens LH
Coopmans FM
Schmidt R
Preuss TM
Rilling JK
Li L
Source :
Human brain mapping [Hum Brain Mapp] 2015 Aug; Vol. 36 (8), pp. 3064-75. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Jun 09.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

With the mapping of macroscale connectomes by means of in vivo diffusion-weighted MR Imaging (DWI) rapidly gaining in popularity, one of the necessary steps is the examination of metrics of connectivity strength derived from these reconstructions. In the field of human macroconnectomics the number of reconstructed fiber streamlines (NOS) is more and more used as a metric of cortico-cortical interareal connectivity strength, but the link between DWI NOS and in vivo animal tract-tracing measurements of anatomical connectivity strength remains poorly understood. In this technical report, we communicate on a comparison between DWI derived metrics and tract-tracing metrics of projection strength. Tract-tracing information on projection strength of interareal pathways was extracted from two commonly used macaque connectome datasets, including (1) the CoCoMac database of collated tract-tracing experiments of the macaque brain and (2) the high-resolution tract-tracing dataset of Markov and Kennedy and coworkers. NOS and density of reconstructed fiber pathways derived from DWI data acquired across 10 rhesus macaques was found to positively correlate to tract-tracing based measurements of connectivity strength across both the CoCoMac and Markov dataset (both Pā€‰<ā€‰0.001), suggesting DWI NOS to form a valid method of assessment of the projection strength of white matter pathways. Our findings provide confidence of in vivo DWI connectome reconstructions to represent fairly realistic estimates of the wiring strength of white matter projections. Our cross-modal comparison supports the notion of in vivo DWI to be a valid methodology for robust description and interpretation of brain wiring.<br /> (© 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1097-0193
Volume :
36
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Human brain mapping
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26058702
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.22828