Revealing the Relevant Spatiotemporal Scale Underlying Whole-Brain Dynamics

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Abstract

The brain rapidly processes and adapts to new information by dynamically transitioning between whole-brain functional networks. In this whole-brain modeling study we investigate the relevance of spatiotemporal scale in whole-brain functional networks. This is achieved through estimating brain parcellations at different spatial scales (100–900 regions) and time series at different temporal scales (from milliseconds to seconds) generated by a whole-brain model fitted to fMRI data. We quantify the richness of the dynamic repertoire at each spatiotemporal scale by computing the entropy of transitions between whole-brain functional networks. The results show that the optimal relevant spatial scale is around 300 regions and a temporal scale of around 150 ms. Overall, this study provides much needed evidence for the relevant spatiotemporal scales and recommendations for analyses of brain dynamics.

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Kobeleva, X., López-González, A., Kringelbach, M. L., & Deco, G. (2021). Revealing the Relevant Spatiotemporal Scale Underlying Whole-Brain Dynamics. Frontiers in Neuroscience, 15. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2021.715861

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