Lecture | Olaf Sporns | Network Architecture of the Human Connectome: Mapping Structural and Functional Connectivity episode artwork

EPISODE · Feb 24, 2014 · 52 MIN

Lecture | Olaf Sporns | Network Architecture of the Human Connectome: Mapping Structural and Functional Connectivity

from Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture · host Olaf Sporns, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University

Recent advances in network science have greatly increased our understanding of the structure and function of many networked systems, ranging from transportation networks, to social networks, the internet, ecosystems, and biochemical and gene transcription pathways. Network approaches are also increasingly applied to the brain, at several levels of scale from cells to entire nervous systems. Early studies in this emerging field of brain connectomics have focused on mapping brain network topology and identifying some of its characteristic features, including small world attributes, modularity and hubs. More recently, the emphasis has shifted towards linking brain network topology to brain dynamics, the patterns of functional interactions that emerge from spontaneous and evoked neuronal activity. I will give an overview of recent work characterizing the structure of complex brain networks, with particular emphasis on studies demonstrating how the network topology of the connectome constrains and shapes its capacity to process and integrate information. (Feb. 24, 2014) If you would like to become an AFFILIATE of the Center, please let us know.Subscribe to our YouTube channel to get updates on our latest videos.Follow along with us on Instagram |  Facebook NOTE:  The views and opinions expressed by the speaker do not necessarily reflect those held by the Center for Mind, Brain, and Culture or Emory University.

Lecture | Olaf Sporns | Network Architecture of the Human Connectome: Mapping Structural and Functional Connectivity

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Lecture | Olaf Sporns | Network Architecture of the Human Connectome: Mapping Structural and Functional Connectivity

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Recent advances in network science have greatly increased our understanding of the structure and function of many networked systems, ranging from transportation networks, to social networks, the internet, ecosystems, and biochemical and gene...

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