Tutorial 28: Connectivity

[TUTORIAL UNDER DEVELOPMENT: NOT READY FOR PUBLIC USE]

Authors: Francois Tadel, Esther Florin, Sergul Aydore, Syed Ashrafulla, Elizabeth Bock, Sylvain Baillet

During the past few years, the research focus in brain imaging moved from localizing functional regions to understanding how different regions interact together. It is now widely accepted that some of the brain functions are not supported by isolated regions but rather by a dense network of nodes interacting in various ways. In order to quantify the amount of information exchanged between regions, experts in signal processing developed metrics to compare signals recorded in these different regions.

These inter-regional measures can help us explore the brain dynamics by understanding if two regions are activated synchroneously during a task (functional connectivity) or linked by causal interactions (effective connectivity). This tutorial introduces the measures and display tools available in Brainstorm to explore this inter-regional connectivity.

Connectivity processes

In the Process1 and Process2 tabs, the menu "Connectivity" contains the following options:

Each of these metrics offer several variations:

[ATTACH]

Simulate auto-regressive signals

Process: Simulate > Simulate AR signals

Process: Simulate > Simulate AR signals (random)

Process: Simulate > Simulate generic signals

Example 1: Correlation sensor-sources

Example 2: Coherence scout-scout

Method: Correlation

Method: Coherence

Method: Granger causality

Method: Phase locking value

Unconstrained sources

Describe how the three orientations are handled.

On the hard drive

Document the file tags

Document how to extract the connect matrix

How to input your own connect matrix

Additional documentation








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Tutorials/Connectivity (last edited 2017-04-20 11:14:30 by FrancoisTadel)