23
Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy. Three general questions. How is the brain anatomically organized? How is the mind functionally organized? How is the functional organization of the kind reflected in the anatomical organization of the brain? The localization question - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Chapter 11:Cognition and neuroanatomy

Page 2: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Three general questions

1. How is the brain anatomically organized?

2. How is the mind functionally organized?

3. How is the functional organization of the kind reflected in the anatomical organization of the brain?

(a) The localization question(b) The causation question

Page 3: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Studying neural/mental architecture

Three different frameworks for thinking about large-scale neural organization

Anatomical connectivity

Functional connectivity

Effective connectivity

Page 4: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Principle of segregation

• Cerebral cortex is divided into segregated areas with distinct neuronal populations

• Brodman used staining techniques to identify cortical areas• types of cell they contain• density of cells

• Classification made on purely anatomical grounds – not a functional classification

Page 5: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Anatomical connectivity

• Given by the anatomical connections between different cortical structures

• Can be mapped using Diffusion Tensor Imaging

• Using the diffusion of water molecules to track axonal connections between cortical regions

• The most reliable data are derived from tracing studies (invasive)

Page 6: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Modeling anatomical connectivity

• Network diagrams of cortical regions in non-human primates

• Wiring diagrams derived from cortical connectivity matrices

• Large-scale cortical networks can be analyzed graph-theoreticallySeem to have small-world connectivity

patterns

Page 7: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Connectivity matrix and wiring diagram for macaque visual cortex (based on Felleman and Van Essen 1991)

Page 8: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Analyzing networks as graphs

Vertices = neural regions

Edges = connections between regions

Path = set of edges connecting two vertices

Page 9: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Interesting network properties

Characteristic path lengthThe typical shortest path between any two vertices

Clustering coefficientThe extent to which the edges in the neighbourhood of each vertex are connected to each other

e.g. cliquishness of a social network (the extent to which each individual’s acquaintances are acquainted with each other)

Page 10: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Types of graph

Annalysis of connection matrices from studies of cat and macaque cortex have shown that some brain networks have small world properties

Page 11: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Studying neural/mental architecture

Three different frameworks for thinking about large-scale neural organization

Anatomical connectivity

Functional connectivity

Effective connectivity

Page 12: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Functional connectivity

• Standardly defined in terms of statistical correlations between spatially remote neurophysiological events

• Frequently used to identify task-specific brain networks

• Researchers have claimed that some functional networks are impaired in particular disorders

Page 13: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

ExampleFunctional connectivity data can be derived from resting state fMRI studies

Has been used to support idea of default mode “network” including

posterior cingulate cortex and ventral anterior cingulate cortex

vACC = blue

PCC = red

Page 14: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Standard analysis of fMRI data

STEP 1Model correlation between BOLD response in individual

volume elements (voxels) and some experimentally controlled variable

STEP 2Create a statistical parametric map (SPM) that shows

which voxels have time-series correlated with a certain task component

Page 15: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Implicit modeling assumptions

The connections between elements of the system (e.g. specific voxels) are not taken into account in creating the SPM

The analysis treats experimental variables as inputs that act directly on system elements

What the SPM identifies are system elements that are correlated in the same way with the task

This tells us nothing about how those system elements are related to each other

Page 16: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Limits of functional connectivity

“Patterns of functional connectivity are statistical signatures of hidden causal processes occurring within and among specific and time-varying subsets of neurons and brain regions. The identification of which subsets are currently causally engaged in a given task requires the inclusion of and reference to a structural model in order to access effective connectivity patterns.”

Sporns and Tononi 2007

Page 17: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Studying neural/mental architecture

Three different frameworks for thinking about large-scale neural organization

Anatomical connectivity

Functional connectivity

Effective connectivity

Page 18: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Effective connectivity

“The influence one neural system exerts on another” (Friston and Büchel 2003)

“The functional connectivity between two brain regions simply tells us how correlated their activities are. Their effective connectivity, on the other hand, is the explicit influence that one region’s activity has on the activity of the second along the direct anatomical pathway linking the two.”

(Horwitz, Friston, Taylor 2000)

Page 19: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Models of effective connectivity

• Information about effective connectivity is not standardly derived from imaging data

• Rather, assumptions about effective connectivity are used to interpret imaging data

• These assumptions are derived from anatomical connectivity data

Page 20: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy
Page 21: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Two ways of thinking about effective connectivity

(1) A quasi-anatomical notion, corresponding to the existence of direct cortical pathways between cortical regions

(2) An information-processing notion, tracking the flow of information through a brain network

Page 22: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Differences

• In the quasi-anatomical sense, effective connectivity essentially provides a set of parameters for a systems analysis

• In the information-processing sense, we need something that will allow us:

• to identify a series of discrete information-processing stages • to correlate information-processing stages with neural areas

(possibly distributed)

Page 23: Chapter 11: Cognition and neuroanatomy

Effective connecticity in the information-processing sensefMRI tells us very little about how information-processing takes place

• No consensus on what type of neural activity correlates with the BOLD signal

• No distinction between excitatory and inhibitory connections

Progress may come from calibrating fMRI with other tools for studying information-processing tools (neurophysiological, molecular, biological, computational. . .)