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Directed functional and structural connectivity in a large-scale model for the mouse cortex
Author(s) -
Ronaldo V. Nunes,
Marcelo Bussotti Reyes,
Jorge F. Mejías,
Raphael Y. de Camargo
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
network neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2472-1751
DOI - 10.1162/netn_a_00206
Subject(s) - functional connectivity , connectome , computer science , neuroscience , coherence (philosophical gambling strategy) , correlation , human connectome project , computational model , artificial intelligence , psychology , mathematics , statistics , geometry
Inferring the structural connectivity from electrophysiological measurements is a fundamental challenge in systems neuroscience. Directed functional connectivity measures, such as the generalized partial directed coherence (GPDC), provide estimates of the causal influence between areas. However, the relation between causality estimates and structural connectivity is still not clear. We analyzed this problem by evaluating the effectiveness of GPDC to estimate the connectivity of a ground-truth, data-constrained computational model of a large-scale network model of the mouse cortex. The model contains 19 cortical areas composed of spiking neurons, with areas connected by long-range projections with weights obtained from a tract-tracing cortical connectome. We show that GPDC values provide a reasonable estimate of structural connectivity, with an average Pearson correlation over simulations of 0.74. Moreover, even in a typical electrophysiological recording scenario containing five areas, the mean correlation was above 0.6. These results suggest that it may be possible to empirically estimate structural connectivity from functional connectivity even when detailed whole-brain recordings are not achievable.

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