Keywords: Functional Connectivity, High-Field MRI, Neuro, Structural connectivity, Functional connectivity
Motivation: A definitive baseline connectome of brainstem nuclei is missing.
Goal(s): To improve brainstem hodology in living humans by using the similarity between functional and structural connectomes of brainstem nuclei as ground truth.
Approach: In healthy subjects, we mapped 58 Brainstem Navigator atlas labels to high spatial resolution functional and diffusion-weighted 7 Tesla MRI, and computed their functional and structural connectivity, the latter computed using three probabilistic tractography methods proposed in the literature (seed-, ACT-, ACT-SIFT-based), with 148 cortical and 21 subcortical areas.
Results: ACT-SIFT outperformed the other methods within the brainstem and the cortex by reducing large fiber bias.
Impact: Comparison of structural and functional connectomes achieved with different methodology can improve the understanding and mapping of brainstem nuclei connections in living humans and establish a baseline connectome useful to evaluate a broad set of diseases including movement/sleep disorders.
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