Contains fulltext : 196749.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Fifteen years ago, Passingham and colleagues proposed that brain areas can be described in terms of their unique pattern of input and output connections with the rest of the brain, and that these connections are a crucial determinant of their function. We explore how the advent of neuroimaging of connectivity has allowed us to test and extend this proposal. We show that describing the brain in terms of an abstract connectivity space, as opposed to physical locations of areas, provides a natural and powerful framework for thinking about brain function and its variation across the brains of individuals, populations, and species.12 p
Brain network data—measuring structural interconnections among brain regions of interest—are increas...
The human connectome is a topologically complex, spatially embedded network. While its topological p...
Central to macro-connectomics and much of systems neuroscience is the idea that we can summarise mac...
Fifteen years ago, Passingham and colleagues proposed that brain areas can be described in terms of ...
Brain connectivity is often considered in terms of the communication between functionally distinct b...
Contains fulltext : 190146.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
fundamental and largely unanswered question in neuroscience is whether extrinsic connectivity and fu...
The great promise of comparative neuroscience is to understand why brains differ by investigating th...
A fundamental and largely unanswered question in neuroscience is whether extrinsic connectivity and ...
Contains fulltext : 204254.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
International audienceCurrent theories hold that the human cortex can be subdivided in anatomically ...
Brain network data—measuring anatomical interconnections among a common set of brain regions—are inc...
Central to macro-connectomics and much of systems neuroscience is the idea that we can summarise mac...
The anatomical connections of a brain area constrain the information it receives and the influence i...
The spatial location of cells in neural tissue can be easily extracted from many imaging modalities,...
Brain network data—measuring structural interconnections among brain regions of interest—are increas...
The human connectome is a topologically complex, spatially embedded network. While its topological p...
Central to macro-connectomics and much of systems neuroscience is the idea that we can summarise mac...
Fifteen years ago, Passingham and colleagues proposed that brain areas can be described in terms of ...
Brain connectivity is often considered in terms of the communication between functionally distinct b...
Contains fulltext : 190146.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
fundamental and largely unanswered question in neuroscience is whether extrinsic connectivity and fu...
The great promise of comparative neuroscience is to understand why brains differ by investigating th...
A fundamental and largely unanswered question in neuroscience is whether extrinsic connectivity and ...
Contains fulltext : 204254.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access
International audienceCurrent theories hold that the human cortex can be subdivided in anatomically ...
Brain network data—measuring anatomical interconnections among a common set of brain regions—are inc...
Central to macro-connectomics and much of systems neuroscience is the idea that we can summarise mac...
The anatomical connections of a brain area constrain the information it receives and the influence i...
The spatial location of cells in neural tissue can be easily extracted from many imaging modalities,...
Brain network data—measuring structural interconnections among brain regions of interest—are increas...
The human connectome is a topologically complex, spatially embedded network. While its topological p...
Central to macro-connectomics and much of systems neuroscience is the idea that we can summarise mac...