A spatiotemporal complexity architecture of human brain activity
Feb 1, 2023·,,,,,,·
0 min read
Stephan Krohn
Nina Von Schwanenflug
Leonhard Waschke
Amy Romanello
Martin Gell
Douglas D. Garrett
Carsten Finke
Abstract
The human brain operates in large-scale functional networks. These networks are an expression of temporally correlated activity across brain regions, but how global network properties relate to the neural dynamics of individual regions remains incompletely understood. Here, we show that the brain’s network architecture is tightly linked to critical episodes of neural regularity, visible as spontaneous “complexity drops” in functional magnetic resonance imaging signals. These episodes closely explain functional connectivity strength between regions, subserve the propagation of neural activity patterns, and reflect interindividual differences in age and behavior. Furthermore, complexity drops define neural activity states that dynamically shape the connectivity strength, topological configuration, and hierarchy of brain networks and comprehensively explain known structure-function relationships within the brain. These findings delineate a principled complexity architecture of neural activity—a human “complexome” that underpins the brain’s functional network organization.
Type
Publication
Science Advances