Journal article

The contribution of geometry to the human connectome

JA Roberts, A Perry, AR Lord, G Roberts, PB Mitchell, RE Smith, F Calamante, M Breakspear

Neuroimage | Published : 2016

Abstract

The human connectome is a topologically complex, spatially embedded network. While its topological properties have been richly characterized, the constraints imposed by its spatial embedding are poorly understood. By applying a novel resampling method to tractography data, we show that the brain's spatial embedding makes a major, but not definitive, contribution to the topology of the human connectome. We first identify where the brain's structural hubs would likely be located if geometry was the sole determinant of brain topology. Empirical networks show a widespread shift away from this geometric center toward more peripheral interconnected skeletons in each hemisphere, with discrete clust..

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University of Melbourne Researchers