论文标题
人脑中白质的结晶度表征
Crystallinity characterization of white matter in the human brain
论文作者
论文摘要
白质微观结构通过促进神经元交流的认知和功能为认知和功能,而这种结构的非侵入性表征仍然是神经科学界的研究领域。但是,评估白质微观结构的努力受到表征所需的大量信息的阻碍。神经影像中的当前技术通过用单个标量液通常不容易解释的单个标量来代表白质特征来解决此问题。在这里,我们通过引入材料科学的工具来解决这些问题,以表征白质微观结构。我们通过分析其同质性并确定在材料科学的背景下,在介质尺度上研究结构。我们发现,结晶度沿解剖学差异的可解释线提供了新的信息,并且在整个大脑之间各不相同,在与call体相邻的区域中具有最高的同质性。此外,结晶度高度可靠,但在个体之间也有所不同,这使其成为一种可能有用的生物标志物,用于检查沿各个维度的白质中的个体差异。我们还将白质分解为“晶粒”或高结构相似性的体素的连续集,并发现与其他白质细胞的重叠。最后,我们通过材料科学的另一种工具(债券取向订单参数)来表征局部白质特征的形状 - 并使用这种新技术定位光纤交叉和束。我们的结果提供了评估多个长度尺度上的白质微观结构的新方法,并开放了未来查询的新途径。我们希望这项工作促进了软物质和神经科学领域之间未来的生产性对话。
White matter microstructure underpins cognition and function in the human brain through the facilitation of neuronal communication, and the non-invasive characterization of this structure remains a research frontier in the neuroscience community. Efforts to assess white matter microstructure, however, are hampered by the sheer amount of information needed for characterization. Current techniques within neuroimaging deal with this problem by representing white matter features with single scalars that are often not easy to interpret. Here, we address these issues by introducing tools from materials science for the characterization of white matter microstructure. We investigate structure on a mesoscopic scale by analyzing its homogeneity and determining which regions of the brain are structurally homogeneous, or "crystalline" in the context of materials science. We find that crystallinity provides novel information and varies across the brain along interpretable lines of anatomical difference, with highest homogeneity in regions adjacent to the corpus callosum. Furthermore, crystallinity is highly reliable, and yet also varies between individuals, making it a potentially useful biomarker to examine individual differences in white matter along various dimensions. We also parcellate white matter into "crystal grains," or contiguous sets of voxels of high structural similarity, and find overlap with other white matter parcellations. Finally, we characterize the shapes of local white matter signatures through another tool from materials science - bond-orientational order parameters - and locate fiber crossings and fascicles with this new technique. Our results provide new means of assessing white matter microstructure on multiple length scales, and open new avenues of future inquiry. We hope that this work fosters future productive dialogue between the fields of soft matter and neuroscience.