Functional–Anatomical Validation and Individual Variation of Diffusion Tractography-based Segmentation of the Human Thalamus
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 6 July 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 15 (1) , 31-39
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhh105
Abstract
Parcellation of the human thalamus based on cortical connectivity information inferred from non-invasive diffusion-weighted images identifies sub-regions that we have proposed correspond to nuclei. Here we test the functional and anatomical validity of this proposal by comparing data from diffusion tractography, cytoarchitecture and functional imaging. We acquired diffusion imaging data in eleven healthy subjects and performed probabilistic tractography from voxels within the thalamus. Cortical connectivity information was used to divide the thalamus into sub-regions with highest probability of connectivity to distinct cortical areas. The relative volumes of these connectivity-defined sub-regions correlate well with volumetric predictions based on a histological atlas. Previously reported centres of functional activation within the thalamus during motor or executive tasks co-localize within atlas regions showing high probabilities of connection to motor or prefrontal cortices, respectively. This work provides a powerful validation of quantitative grey matter segmentation using diffusion tractography in humans. Co-registering thalamic sub-regions from 11 healthy individuals characterizes inter-individual variation in segmentation and results in a population-based atlas of the human thalamus that can be used to assign likely anatomical labels to thalamic locations in standard brain space. This provides a tool for specific localization of functional activations or lesions to putative thalamic nuclei.Keywords
This publication has 65 references indexed in Scilit:
- Characterization and propagation of uncertainty in diffusion‐weighted MR imagingMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2003
- Human brain regions required for the dividing and switching of attention between two features of a single objectCognitive Brain Research, 2003
- Non-invasive mapping of connections between human thalamus and cortex using diffusion imagingNature Neuroscience, 2003
- The role of the rostral frontal cortex (area 10) in prospective memory: a lateral versus medial dissociationNeuropsychologia, 2003
- Similarities and Differences in the Neural Correlates of Episodic Memory Retrieval and Working MemoryNeuroImage, 2002
- Brain regions involved in prospective memory as determined by positron emission tomographyNeuropsychologia, 2001
- Human brain activation under controlled thermal stimulation and habituation to noxious heat: An fMRI studyMagnetic Resonance in Medicine, 1999
- Schizophrenia and cognitive dysmetria: a positron-emission tomography study of dysfunctional prefrontal-thalamic-cerebellar circuitry.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996
- Neural systems engaged by planning: a PET study of the Tower of London taskNeuropsychologia, 1996
- MR diffusion tensor spectroscopy and imagingBiophysical Journal, 1994