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A Study of Brain Networks Associated with Swallowing Using Graph-Theoretical Approaches
Authors
AL Barabasi
Bo Luan
+44 more
CJ Honey
DH Zald
DJ Watts
DS Bassett
E Bullmore
E Mbonda
E Ravasz
E Sejdić
Ervin Sejdić
G Gong
HB Mann
J Whittaker
K Supekar
K Supekar
KJ Friston
KM Mosier
L Wang
LL Zeng
M Kaiser
M Rubinov
MEJ Newman
MK Kern
N Tzourio-Mazoyer
O Sporns
O Sporns
P Sörös
P Sörös
Peter Sörös
R Dziewas
R Salvador
RE Martin
RE Martin
RE Martin
S Achard
S Achard
S Boccaletti
S Hamdy
SH Strogatz
SY Lowell
V Latora
W Liao
Y Li
Y Liu
Yong He
Publication date
1 August 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
Cite
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Functional connectivity between brain regions during swallowing tasks is still not well understood. Understanding these complex interactions is of great interest from both a scientific and a clinical perspective. In this study, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was utilized to study brain functional networks during voluntary saliva swallowing in twenty-two adult healthy subjects (all females, 23.1±1.52 years of age). To construct these functional connections, we computed mean partial correlation matrices over ninety brain regions for each participant. Two regions were determined to be functionally connected if their correlation was above a certain threshold. These correlation matrices were then analyzed using graph-theoretical approaches. In particular, we considered several network measures for the whole brain and for swallowing-related brain regions. The results have shown that significant pairwise functional connections were, mostly, either local and intra-hemispheric or symmetrically inter-hemispheric. Furthermore, we showed that all human brain functional network, although varying in some degree, had typical small-world properties as compared to regular networks and random networks. These properties allow information transfer within the network at a relatively high efficiency. Swallowing-related brain regions also had higher values for some of the network measures in comparison to when these measures were calculated for the whole brain. The current results warrant further investigation of graph-theoretical approaches as a potential tool for understanding the neural basis of dysphagia. © 2013 Luan et al
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