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2018 journal original-research Elife

Functional gradients of the cerebellum

Guell X, Schmahmann JD, Gabrieli J, Ghosh SS

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.7554/eLife.36652
PubMed
30106371
PMC
PMC6092123
Cited by
492

Key findings

Diffusion-map embedding of resting fMRI from 1003 Human Connectome Project participants revealed a primary motor-to-transmodal cerebellar gradient and a secondary task-focused-to-task-unfocused gradient, providing a graded organisational framework for the well-known double-motor and triple-non-motor cerebellar representations.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

A central principle for understanding the cerebral cortex is that macroscale anatomy reflects a functional hierarchy from primary to transmodal processing. In contrast, the central axis of motor and nonmotor macroscale organization in the cerebellum remains unknown. Here we applied diffusion map embedding to resting-state data from the Human Connectome Project dataset (n = 1003), and show for the first time that cerebellar functional regions follow a gradual organization which progresses from primary (motor) to transmodal (DMN, task-unfocused) regions. A secondary axis extends from task-unfocused to task-focused processing. Further, these two principal gradients revealed novel functional properties of the well-established cerebellar double motor representation (lobules I-VI and VIII), and its relationship with the recently described triple nonmotor representation (lobules VI/Crus I, Crus II/VIIB, IX/X). Functional differences exist not only between the two motor but also between the three nonmotor representations, and second motor representation might share functional similarities with third nonmotor representation.

Topics

  • connectomics-circuits
  • neuroimaging-methods

Preprint precursor

Earlier versions of this work that have been superseded by the published record above.

Lab authors

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