The effect of external stimulation on functional networks in the aging healthy human brain

2021 
Understanding the brain changes occurring during aging can provide new insights for developing treatments that alleviate or reverse cognitive decline. Neurostimulation techniques have emerged as potential treatments for brain disorders and to improve cognitive functions. Nevertheless, given the ethical restrictions of neurostimulation approaches, in silico perturbation protocols based on causal whole-brain models are fundamental to gaining a mechanistic understanding of brain dynamics. Furthermore, this strategy could serve as a more specific biomarker relating local activity with global brain dynamics. Here, we used a large resting-state fMRI dataset divided into middle-aged (N=310, aged = 65) to characterize brain states in each group as a probabilistic metastable substate (PMS) space, each with a probabilistic occurrence and frequency. Then, we fitted the PMS to a whole-brain model and applied in silico stimulations with different intensities in each node to force transitions from the brain states of the older group to the middle-age group. We found that the precuneus, a brain area belonging to the default mode network and the rich club, was the best stimulation target. These findings might have important implications for designing neurostimulation interventions to revert the effects of aging on whole-brain dynamics.
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