@article{a66d1e081a674cb6a237d78b696d0e5b,
title = "Macro-connectomics and microstructure predict dynamic plasticity patterns in the non-human primate brain",
abstract = "The brain displays a remarkable ability to adapt following injury by altering its connections through neural plasticity. Many of the biological mechanisms that underlie plasticity are known, but there is little knowledge as to when, or where in the brain plasticity will occur following injury. This knowledge could guide plasticity-promoting interventions and create a more accurate roadmap of the recovery process following injury. We causally investigated the time-course of plasticity after hippocampal lesions using multi-modal MRI in monkeys. We show that post-injury plasticity is highly dynamic, but also largely predictable on the basis of the functional connectivity of the lesioned region, gradients of cell densities across the cortex and the pre-lesion network structure of the brain. The ability to predict which brain areas will plastically adapt their functional connectivity following injury may allow us to decipher why some brain lesions lead to permanent loss of cognitive function, while others do not.",
author = "Sean Froudist-Walsh and Browning, {Philip G.F.} and Young, {James J.} and Murphy, {Kathy L.} and Mars, {Rogier B.} and Lazar Fleysher and Croxson, {Paula L.}",
note = "Funding Information: We would like to thank Mark Baxter, Hauke Kolster, Ronald Primm, Ignacio Medel, Frank Macaluso, Charles Adapoe, Cheuk Tang and Zahi Fayad for their support of this research. We would also like to thank Mark Baxter and Peter Rudebeck for their comments on an earlier version of this manuscript and Vyacheslav Karolis for helpful discussions. We would also like to thank Gustavo Deco and Kelly Shen for providing data relating to the CoCoMac database and the Regional Map atlas. This work was supported by a Charles H Revson Foundation Senior Fellowship in the Biomedical Sciences to PLC and the Friedman Brain Institute at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. RBM is supported by a BBSRC David Phillips Fellowship (BB/N019814/1).Icahn School of Medicine at Paula L Croxson Mount Sinai Sean Froudist-WalshBiotechnology and Biological Rogier B Mars Sciences Research Council Charles H. Revson Foundation Paula L Croxson. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} Froudist-Walsh et al.",
year = "2018",
month = nov,
day = "1",
doi = "10.7554/eLife.34354",
language = "English",
volume = "7",
journal = "eLife",
issn = "2050-084X",
publisher = "eLife Sciences Publications",
}