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In response to a growing interest in refining brain connectivity assessments, this study focuses on integrating white matter fiber-specific microstructural properties into structural connectomes. Spanning ages 8-19 years in a developmental sample, it explores age-related patterns of microstructure-informed network properties at both local and global scales. First, the diffusion-weighted signal fraction associated with each tractography-reconstructed streamline was constructed. Subsequently, the convex optimization modeling for microstructure-informed tractography (COMMIT) approach was employed to generate microstructure-informed connectomes from diffusion MRI data. To complete the investigation, network characteristics within eight functionally defined networks (visual, somatomotor, dorsal attention, ventral attention, limbic, fronto-parietal, default mode, and subcortical networks) were evaluated. The findings underscore a consistent increase in global efficiency across child and adolescent development within the visual, somatomotor, and default mode networks ( < 0.005). Additionally, mean strength exhibits an upward trend in the somatomotor and visual networks ( < 0.001). Notably, nodes within the dorsal and ventral visual pathways manifest substantial age-dependent changes in local efficiency, aligning with existing evidence of extended maturation in these pathways. The outcomes strongly support the notion of a prolonged developmental trajectory for visual association cortices. This study contributes valuable insights into the nuanced dynamics of microstructure-informed brain connectivity throughout different developmental stages.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/netn_a_00378 | DOI Listing |
Imaging Neurosci (Camb)
March 2025
Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Charlestown, MA, United States.
Anatomic tracing is the gold standard tool for delineating brain connections and for validating more recently developed imaging approaches such as diffusion MRI tractography. A key step in the analysis of data from tracer experiments is the careful, manual charting of fiber trajectories on histological sections. This is a very time-consuming process, which limits the amount of annotated tracer data that are available for validation studies.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFImaging Neurosci (Camb)
June 2025
Department of Biomedical Engineering, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
The g-ratio of a myelinated axon is defined as the ratio of the inner-to-outer diameter of the myelin sheath and modulates conduction speed of action potentials along axons. This g-ratio can be mappedat the macroscopic scale across the entire human brain using multi-modal MRI and sampled along white matter streamlines reconstructed from diffusion-weighted images to derive the g-ratio of a white matter tract. This tractometry approach has shown spatiotemporal variations in g-ratio across white matter tracts and networks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHum Brain Mapp
December 2024
School of Information and Communication Engineering, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China, Chengdu, China.
Netw Neurosci
October 2024
Cardiff University Brain Research Imaging Centre (CUBRIC), School of Psychology, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
In response to a growing interest in refining brain connectivity assessments, this study focuses on integrating white matter fiber-specific microstructural properties into structural connectomes. Spanning ages 8-19 years in a developmental sample, it explores age-related patterns of microstructure-informed network properties at both local and global scales. First, the diffusion-weighted signal fraction associated with each tractography-reconstructed streamline was constructed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFbioRxiv
March 2025
Department of Imaging Physics, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Delft University of Technology, Delft, the Netherlands.
Mapping the brain's fiber network is crucial for understanding its function and malfunction, but resolving nerve trajectories over large fields of view is challenging. Electron microscopy only studies small brain volumes, diffusion magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) has limited spatial resolution, and polarization microscopy provides unidirectional orientations in birefringence-preserving tissues. Scattered light imaging (SLI) has previously enabled micron-resolution mapping of multi-directional fibers in unstained brain cryo-sections.
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