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Functional Architecture of Cerebral Cortex During Naturalistic Movie-Watching

45 Pages Posted: 15 Mar 2022 Publication Status: Published

See all articles by Reza Rajimehr

Reza Rajimehr

University of Cambridge - MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

Haoran Xu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - McGovern Institute for Brain Research

Asa Farahani

McGill University

Simon Kornblith

affiliation not provided to SSRN

John Duncan

University of Cambridge - MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit

Robert Desimone

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - McGovern Institute for Brain Research

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Abstract

Characterizing the functional organization of cerebral cortex is a fundamental step in understanding how different kinds of information are processed in the brain. Neuroimaging studies over the past decades have uncovered the function of many cortical areas in response to selected stimulus categories. However, it is still unclear how cortical areas are organized during naturalistic visual and auditory stimulation. Here we used high-resolution functional MRI data from 176 human subjects to map the macro-architecture of the entire cerebral cortex based on responses to a 60-minute audiovisual movie stimulus. A data-driven clustering approach revealed a map of 24 functional areas/networks, each related to a specific aspect of sensory or cognitive processing. The map included three distinct executive control (domain-general) networks which showed a strong push-pull interaction with domain-specific regions in visual, auditory, and language cortex. The cortical parcellation scheme presented here provides a comprehensive and unified map of functionally defined areas, which could replace a large set of functional localizer maps.

Keywords: cerebral cortex, cortical map, parcellation, clustering, fMRI, human connectome project

Suggested Citation

Rajimehr, Reza and Xu, Haoran and Farahani, Asa and Kornblith, Simon and Duncan, John and Desimone, Robert, Functional Architecture of Cerebral Cortex During Naturalistic Movie-Watching. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4058693 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4058693
This version of the paper has not been formally peer reviewed.

Reza Rajimehr (Contact Author)

University of Cambridge - MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit ( email )

15 Chaucer Road
Cambridge, CB2 7EF
United Kingdom

Haoran Xu

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - McGovern Institute for Brain Research ( email )

Asa Farahani

McGill University ( email )

1001 Sherbrooke St. W
Montreal
Canada

Simon Kornblith

affiliation not provided to SSRN ( email )

No Address Available

John Duncan

University of Cambridge - MRC Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit ( email )

15 Chaucer Road
Cambridge, CB2 7EF
United Kingdom

Robert Desimone

Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) - McGovern Institute for Brain Research ( email )

Cambridge, MA
United States

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