Peripheral contributions to resting state brain dynamics

Abstract The correlational structure of brain activity dynamics in the absence of stimuli or behavior is often taken to reveal intrinsic properties of neural function. To test the limits of this assumption, we analyzed peripheral contributions to resting state activity measured by fMRI in unanesthet...

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Main Authors: Sarah Bricault, Miranda Dawson, Jiyoung Lee, Mitul Desai, Miriam Schwalm, Kevin Sunho Chung, Elizabeth DeTienne, Erinn Fagan, Nan Li, Andrew Becker, Sureshkumar Muthupalani, Jan-Philipp Fränken, Dimitris A. Pinotsis, Alan Jasanoff
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2024-12-01
Series:Nature Communications
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-55064-6
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Summary:Abstract The correlational structure of brain activity dynamics in the absence of stimuli or behavior is often taken to reveal intrinsic properties of neural function. To test the limits of this assumption, we analyzed peripheral contributions to resting state activity measured by fMRI in unanesthetized, chemically immobilized male rats that emulate human neuroimaging conditions. We find that perturbation of somatosensory input channels modifies correlation strengths that relate somatosensory areas both to one another and to higher-order brain regions, despite the absence of ostensible stimuli or movements. Resting state effects are mediated by the same peripheral and thalamic structures that relay responses to overt sensory stimuli. The impact of basal peripheral input is reduced in a rat model of autism, which displays both lower somatosensory functional connectivity and insensitivity to vibrissa inactivation. These results demonstrate the influence of extrinsic influences on resting state brain phenotypes in health and disease.
ISSN:2041-1723