The bulk of the research effort on brain connectivity revolves around statistical associations among brain regions, which do not directly relate to the causal mechanisms governing brain dynamics. Here we propose the multiscale causal backbone (MCB) of brain dynamics, shared by a set of individuals across multiple temporal scales, and devise a principled methodology to extract it. Our approach leverages recent advances in multiscale causal structure learning and optimizes the trade-off between the model fit and its complexity. Empirical assessment on synthetic data shows the superiority of our methodology over a baseline based on canonical functional connectivity networks. When applied to resting-state fMRI data, we find sparse MCBs for both the left and right brain hemispheres. Thanks to its multiscale nature, our approach shows that at low-frequency bands, causal dynamics are driven by brain regions associated with high-level cognitive functions; at higher frequencies instead, nodes related to sensory processing play a crucial role. Finally, our analysis of individual multiscale causal structures confirms the existence of a causal fingerprint of brain connectivity, thus supporting the existing extensive research in brain connectivity fingerprinting from a causal perspective.

Extracting the Multiscale Causal Backbone of Brain Dynamics / D'Acunto, Gabriele; Bonchi, Francesco; De Francisci Morales, Gianmarco; Petri, Giovanni. - 236:(2024), pp. 265-295. (Intervento presentato al convegno 3rd Conference on Causal Learning and Reasoning tenutosi a Los Angeles; California; USA).

Extracting the Multiscale Causal Backbone of Brain Dynamics

Gabriele D'Acunto
;
Francesco Bonchi
;
Giovanni Petri
2024

Abstract

The bulk of the research effort on brain connectivity revolves around statistical associations among brain regions, which do not directly relate to the causal mechanisms governing brain dynamics. Here we propose the multiscale causal backbone (MCB) of brain dynamics, shared by a set of individuals across multiple temporal scales, and devise a principled methodology to extract it. Our approach leverages recent advances in multiscale causal structure learning and optimizes the trade-off between the model fit and its complexity. Empirical assessment on synthetic data shows the superiority of our methodology over a baseline based on canonical functional connectivity networks. When applied to resting-state fMRI data, we find sparse MCBs for both the left and right brain hemispheres. Thanks to its multiscale nature, our approach shows that at low-frequency bands, causal dynamics are driven by brain regions associated with high-level cognitive functions; at higher frequencies instead, nodes related to sensory processing play a crucial role. Finally, our analysis of individual multiscale causal structures confirms the existence of a causal fingerprint of brain connectivity, thus supporting the existing extensive research in brain connectivity fingerprinting from a causal perspective.
2024
3rd Conference on Causal Learning and Reasoning
causal structure learning; multiscale causal backbone; brain connectivity; fMRI data
04 Pubblicazione in atti di convegno::04b Atto di convegno in volume
Extracting the Multiscale Causal Backbone of Brain Dynamics / D'Acunto, Gabriele; Bonchi, Francesco; De Francisci Morales, Gianmarco; Petri, Giovanni. - 236:(2024), pp. 265-295. (Intervento presentato al convegno 3rd Conference on Causal Learning and Reasoning tenutosi a Los Angeles; California; USA).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1708679
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