Most recent paper

Assessment of cerebrovascular reactivity in middle cerebral artery stenosis using non-hypercapnic resting-state fMRI: a potential biomarker for hemodynamic alterations

Sat, 06/13/2026 - 18:00

BMC Med Imaging. 2026 Jun 13. doi: 10.1186/s12880-026-02503-z. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Cerebrovascular reactivity(CVR), a key indicator of cerebrovascular reserve, is crucial for evaluating cerebrovascular pathophysiology. This study employed resting-state MRI (rs-MRI) to assess CVR alteration in patients with unilateral middle cerebral artery stenosis or occlusion (MCA-S) under non-hypercapnic conditions, comparing them with healthy controls.

METHODS: A total of 41 patients with unilateral MCA-S and 50 age-, sex-, and education-matched normal controls (NC). All underwent rs-MRI and neuropsychological assessments. CVR was derived from rs-fMRI frequency band signals, and t-test was conducted to obtain the CVR-differentiated brain regions. Exploratory seed-based FC analysis was further performed to characterize the network context of regions showing altered CVR. Partial correlation analyses explored relationships between these differential brain regions and both neuropsychological assessments and clinical indicators. Discriminative performance of the CVR-related metric between MCA-S and controls was evaluated using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves.

RESULTS: Compared with the NC group, patients with MCA-S exhibited increased CVR in the contralesional Cerebellum Crus1 (CC1) and decreased iCVR in the ipsilesional postcentral gyrus (PoCG). When contralesional CC1 served as regions of interest (ROIs), increased FC was observed in the ipsilesional middle frontal gyrus (MFG) and the contralesional precuneus of MCA-S patients. The partial correlation analysis indicated a positive correlation between the FC of the ipsilesional MFG and anxiety scores (r = 0.404, (95%CI: 0.106, 0.631), P = 0.012, P-FDR = 0.030). Using ipsilesional PoCG as the ROI, MCA-S patients showed significantly decreased FC in ipsilesional PoCG, contralesional precentral gyrus (PreCG), and ipsilesional supplementary motor area. The FC of the contralesional PreCG showed a positive correlation with anxiety scores (r = 0.436, (95%CI: 0.142, 0.658), P = 0.006, P-FDR = 0.030). ROC analysis demonstrated strong diagnostic accuracy for CVR in CC1 (AUC = 0.809) and PoCG (AUC = 0.787), with a combined AUC of 0.866.

CONCLUSION: Non-hypercapnic rs-MRI effectively evaluates CVR alterations in MCA-S patients and may serve as a complementary physiological biomarker for characterizing hemodynamic alteration.

PMID:42288826 | DOI:10.1186/s12880-026-02503-z

Assessing the effect of long-term high altitude exposure on human brain function: A resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging study

Sat, 06/13/2026 - 18:00

Brain Res Bull. 2026 Jun 13:112008. doi: 10.1016/j.brainresbull.2026.112008. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: This study uses resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to understand and compare the effects of hypoxic conditions at high and ultra-high altitudes.

METHODS: Regional homogeneity (ReHo) and degree centrality (DC) values were calculated and compared between 47 low-altitude (LA, <500m), 39 high-altitude (HA, 1520m), and 34 ultra-high-altitude (UHA, 3650m) healthy adults. Correlations with heart rate and blood oxygen saturation (SpO₂) were analyzed.

RESULTS: Compared to the LA group, the UHA/HA group had significantly lower ReHo values in the bilateral basal ganglia, prefrontal lobes (left/right), left paracentral lobule, and these were positively correlated with SpO₂. Conversely, ReHo values were significantly higher in the bilateral posterior occipital and left superior parietal lobes, and were negatively correlated with SpO₂. DC values were significantly lower in the left orbitofrontal cortex, bilateral pallidum and left inferior frontal gyrus, and were positively correlated with SpO₂. Synchronous decreases in ReHo and DC were found in the left prefrontal cortex, bilateral pallidum and putamen.

CONCLUSION: In high-altitude environments, functional activity is decreased in the basal ganglia, prefrontal cortex, and hippocampus, is accompanied by a compensatory increase in the occipital and superior parietal lobes. Concurrent reductions in DC and ReHo within the left prefrontal cortex, bilateral pallidum and putamen might serve as biomarkers for high-altitude hypoxic functional alterations and aid early detection and intervention of hypoxia-induced brain damage.

PMID:42288178 | DOI:10.1016/j.brainresbull.2026.112008

Synergistic and redundant information dynamics exhibit dissociable alterations across schizophrenia and neurodevelopmental conditions

Sat, 06/13/2026 - 18:00

Brain Inform. 2026 Jun 13. doi: 10.1186/s40708-026-00312-2. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Deficits in neural information integration are hypothesized to underlie diverse psychiatric symptoms, yet the specific patterns of alteration across different disorders remain unclear. In this study, we decomposed information dynamics between brain regions into synergistic and redundant components using a recent information-theoretic approach based on Partial Information Decomposition and applied to resting-state fMRI data from individuals with schizophrenia (SZ), autism spectrum disorder (ASD), and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Our analysis revealed distinct disorder-specific profiles: SZ and ASD exhibited a widespread reduction in synergy, whereas ADHD showed a contrasting increase. Furthermore, ASD was uniquely characterized by a significant reduction in redundancy. Meta-analytic functional annotation using NeuroSynth associated synergy with higher-order cognitive functions and redundancy with lower-level sensorimotor processing. To investigate multivariate organization of these patterns that distinguish psychiatric diagnoses, we employed Linear Discriminant Analysis (LDA). This analysis demonstrated that synergy and redundancy partially capture distinct dimensions of network variation, exhibiting substantial complementarity in their multivariate structure. While redundancy overlapped considerably with correlation-based connectivity, synergy reflected additional structure not fully represented by conventional measures. Together, these findings indicate that decomposing information dynamics provides complementary perspectives on large-scale network organization, offering a refined framework for characterizing psychiatric and neurodevelopmental disorders.

PMID:42287597 | DOI:10.1186/s40708-026-00312-2

Clinical Correlates of Resting-State Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Military Personnel with Adulthood-Onset War-Related Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Sat, 06/13/2026 - 18:00

Brain Connect. 2026 Jun 13:21580014261456366. doi: 10.1177/21580014261456366. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Investigation of the neural substrates of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in military personnel using whole-brain approaches remains scarce, hindering the development of circuit-based neuromodulatory interventions.

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to identify potential associations between clinical symptoms and whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity with magnetic resonance imaging in military personnel with adulthood-onset war-related PTSD.

METHODS: Thirty-seven soldiers from the Canadian Armed Forces with moderate to severe treatment-resistant PTSD participated in this study. We assessed PTSD, anxiety and depressive symptoms, quality of life, and time since trauma. We characterized the whole-brain functional connectome using independent component analysis and regions of interest (ROI)-to-ROI connectivity, as well as its topology using graph theory.

RESULTS: Greater severity of PTSD and anxiety symptoms was associated with lower connectivity (r < 0) between the default mode network (DMN) and frontoparietal network. Greater severity of PTSD symptoms was also associated with a higher nodal clustering coefficient of the inferior parietal lobule from the DMN. Greater severity of anxiety symptoms and longer time since trauma was the only clinical variables that correlated with higher connectivity patterns, all involving the visual networks (the frontoparietal-visual, the visual-DMN, and within-visual networks).

CONCLUSIONS: This work contributes to identifying brain targets for the development of personalized neuromodulatory interventions. In particular, the DMN may be a promising target to alleviate PTSD symptoms, and the visual network may be a target to treat comorbid anxiety symptoms.

PMID:42287083 | DOI:10.1177/21580014261456366

Functional reorganization of the contralesional precentral gyrus following acute subcortical ischemic stroke and its association with gene expression profile

Sat, 06/13/2026 - 18:00

J Neuroeng Rehabil. 2026 Jun 12. doi: 10.1186/s12984-026-02048-w. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Motor recovery after ischemic stroke involves complex functional reorganization, yet the underlying molecular and cellular mechanisms remain poorly understood. This study integrated longitudinal neuroimaging and brain-wide transcriptomic data to characterize the functional dynamics and their gene-expression correlates during motor recovery following subcortical ischemic stroke.

METHODS: We recruited 34 patients with acute right subcortical ischemic stroke and 32 age- and sex-matched healthy controls. All participants underwent baseline resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging, with 22 patients completing a 3-month follow-up scan. Spontaneous neural activity was assessed using the amplitude of low-frequency fluctuations (ALFF), followed by seed-based whole-brain functional connectivity (FC) analysis from regions with longitudinal ALFF differences. We then applied partial least squares (PLS) regression to spatially correlate longitudinal ALFF changes with transcriptomic data from the Allen Human Brain Atlas, identifying a gene expression profile spatially associated with these ALFF changes. These genes were subsequently subjected to functional enrichment and cell-type specificity analyses.

RESULTS: Compared with healthy controls, acute-stage stroke patients showed significantly decreased ALFF in the contralesional precentral gyrus. At 3-month follow-up, ALFF in this region significantly increased, accompanied by strengthened interhemispheric FC with its ipsilesional homologue. Critically, these longitudinal changes in ALFF and interhemispheric FC were significantly correlated with motor recovery. Based on PLS regression, we further identified a specific gene expression profile spatially correlated with the observed ALFF changes. This gene set was specifically enriched in excitatory and inhibitory neurons and was primarily involved in synaptic structure and signaling.

CONCLUSIONS: By linking macroscale imaging dynamics with microscale molecular features, this study demonstrates that the contralesional precentral gyrus plays a supportive role in motor recovery during the subacute phase of subcortical ischemic stroke, with neuronal synaptic plasticity as a potential mechanism. Collectively, these findings inform stage-specific strategies to target interhemispheric inhibition.

PMID:42286663 | DOI:10.1186/s12984-026-02048-w

Putamen function and MAOA genotype define genetic and neural subtypes of hyperactivity-impulsivity in ADHD

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

J Affect Disord. 2026 Jun 12:122127. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2026.122127. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Hyperactivity-impulsivity (HI) is a core ADHD symptom associated with the monoamine oxidase A (MAOA) gene. The neurobiological mechanisms underlying HI heterogeneity in children carrying the MAOA risk genotype remain unclear and may involve distinct subtypes.

METHODS: A total of 326 children with ADHD were genotyped for MAOA, including 108 non-risk and 218 risk carriers. Semi-supervised clustering of HI and executive function (EF) scores from the ADHD Rating Scale, Conners' Rating Scale, and BRIEF was used to classify MAOA risk carriers into subtypes, with non-risk patients as the reference. fALFF differences across subtypes, cognitive mediation between brain activity and behavior, and treatment response at follow-up were examined.

RESULTS: Two subtypes were identified among MAOA risk carriers. Compared with the non-risk group, Subtype 1 showed elevated HI and impaired EF, whereas Subtype 2 showed preserved EF and no HI elevation. Subtype 1 had increased fALFF in the inferior temporal gyrus and higher putamen fALFF than Subtype 2, while Subtype 2 showed increased fALFF in the angular gyrus relative to the non-risk group. Putamen fALFF was associated with inhibition, shifting, emotional control, and the Behavioral Regulation Index (BRI), and mediation analysis suggested an indirect effect on HI via the BRI. After 4 weeks of medication, Subtype 2 showed greater improvement in conduct problems and anxiety.

CONCLUSION: Putamen function may underlie HI heterogeneity among MAOA risk carriers and was associated with better EF, milder symptoms, and greater treatment response.

PMID:42285531 | DOI:10.1016/j.jad.2026.122127

Bayesian generative modeling reveals a multi-modal hierarchical architecture in the mouse functional connectome

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2026 Jun 4:2026.06.01.729443. doi: 10.64898/2026.06.01.729443.

ABSTRACT

Understanding the principles governing large-scale functional organization of the brain remains a central challenge in systems neuroscience. Despite convergent findings, substantial variability across analytical approaches suggests that functional networks may not admit a unique partitioning. Here, we propose that this variability reflects an intrinsic property of the connectome itself: its organization may be fundamentally multi-modal rather than singular.To test this hypothesis, we employ a Bayesian generative modeling framework based on stochastic block models, enabling principled comparison of competing organizational principles and characterization of the full posterior distribution over network partitions. Applying this framework to resting-state fMRI data in mice, we find that a non-degree-corrected hierarchical architecture provides the most parsimonious description of the functional connectome. Importantly, the inferred posterior landscape is not dominated by a single configuration, but instead comprises multiple distinct and co-dominant organizational schemes.At the mesoscale, these hierarchical communities are anatomically grounded yet systematically reorganize canonical resting-state networks: primary sensory systems remain cohesive, whereas higher-order association networks are fractionated into multiple interacting sub-circuits. This global structural variation is driven by structured variability at the community level, where integrative systems exhibit variable regional affiliations while sensory systems act as structurally stable anchors.Together, these findings suggest that the resting-state connectome is best described as a distribution over alternative, yet co-dominant, organizational configurations. This perspective reconciles inconsistencies across previous studies and supports a view of brain organization as inherently degenerate, providing a latent repertoire of network configurations that may underlie adaptive information routing and dynamic functional reconfiguration.

PMID:42282699 | PMC:PMC13251934 | DOI:10.64898/2026.06.01.729443

Brain states recur across diverse narrative contexts during longitudinal viewing

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

bioRxiv [Preprint]. 2026 Jun 3:2026.05.31.729141. doi: 10.64898/2026.05.31.729141.

ABSTRACT

What does the brain do during the continuous, varied experience of watching a story unfold? One account holds that the brain traverses a finite repertoire of recurring states, but whether that repertoire is a stable property of the individual or is reshaped by each new experience has not been tested across diverse naturalistic content within the same person. We characterized the dynamic brain-state repertoire in six individuals who watched the television series Friends across its six seasons during fMRI (up to ∼146 episodes, ∼54 hours per person). For each individual we fit a sticky hierarchical Dirichlet process hidden Markov model across all episodes, discovering brain states (recurring whole-brain activity patterns with characteristic coupling) without pre-specifying their number. Each individual's brain visited roughly forty-five states arrayed along a continuous recurrence gradient, from states active in nearly every episode to episode-specific ones, with no sharp division between them. The repertoire was heterogeneous in why its states recurred: a minority locked to scan-run structure, the majority remaining eligible for content. Transitions were organized by the functional-connectivity similarity between states (per-individual Spearman ρ = 0.33-0.55) and, in most individuals, respected resting-state network boundaries. Episode content was associated with which states the brain occupied moment to moment. The recurrence ordering discovered in Friends transferred to state occupancy during other social-narrative films (five of six individuals) and attenuated as stimuli departed from that class, weakening for visual-only reading and audio-only listening. Across diverse narrative experience, the dynamic repertoire is a property of the individual: content varies which states are visited and when, not which states exist.

PMID:42282603 | PMC:PMC13252121 | DOI:10.64898/2026.05.31.729141

Brain resting state functional connectivity changes with aerobic exercise, and mindfulness: A narrative review

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

Sports Med Health Sci. 2025 Aug 6;8(4):407-425. doi: 10.1016/j.smhs.2025.07.008. eCollection 2026 Jul.

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Neuroimaging studies show that the functional connectivity of the brain changes with age. Resting state functional connectivity (rsFC) in the brain appears to decrease with aging in key networks associated with higher order thinking and effective emotional regulation. Interventions that potentially preserversFC in the brain include 1) physical activity and 2) contemplative practice commonly referred to as mindfulness. The present narrative review aims to summarize the literature concerning the effect of interventions involving exercise, mindful movement, and purely mindfulness-based training on rsFC.

METHODS: Search terms focused on identifying multi-day exercise, mindfulness, or mindful-movement interventions in non-clinical adult populations that included a control group and both pre- and post-assessment of brain rsFC.

RESULTS: Thirty studies were reviewed. Assessed methodological factors that potentially impact findings included subject sample size, scan time length, brain regions targeted for analyses, intervention length and intensity, population characteristics, and differences in sleep quantity/quality. Most studies reported changes in rsFC related to interventions with most observed changes found within the default mode, executive control and salience networks of the brain. However, the largest and most methodologically rigorous study found minimal associations between rsFC and either exercise or mindfulness.

CONCLUSION: Given the inconsistent results found in this review, caution is warranted in the interpretation of changes in rsFC attributable to exercise and mindfulness. This review highlights key factors likely to contribute to differences in reported outcomes. Methodological consistency in fMRI acquisition, data preparation, and analytical approaches are crucial to improve reproducibility and allow for comparison and aggregation.

PMID:42282450 | PMC:PMC13250210 | DOI:10.1016/j.smhs.2025.07.008

Spatial connectivity for local cortical homogeneity in primates

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

Res Sq [Preprint]. 2026 Jun 4:rs.3.rs-9900613. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-9900613/v1.

ABSTRACT

Understanding the functional organization of the primate cortex requires metrics that capture both the temporal and topological dimensions of functional connectivity. Here we propose the spatial connectivity for local homogeneity in cortex (SoHo), a vertex-wise, continuous metric that quantifies the degree to which a cortical vertex and its immediate neighbors share similar spatial profiles of whole-brain functional connectivity. We validated SoHo using large-scale wakeful resting-state fMRI datasets from the Human Connectome Project (HCP) and the NIH Marmoset Brain Mapping Project. In humans, SoHo values showed a striking correspondence with the parcellation boundaries of the HCP multimodal atlas, with low-value regions consistently aligning with areal boundaries. Higher-order association areas exhibited lower SoHo values (functional diversity), while primary sensorimotor areas demonstrated higher values (functional uniformity). Cross-species SoHo mapping revealed that this primary-to-association gradient is evolutionarily conserved across primates, alongside species-specific adaptations in frontoparietal and motor regions. By capturing the local concordance of spatial fingerprints of whole-brain connectivity, SoHo bridges discrete parcellation schemes and continuous models of brain function, offering new insights into primate brain organization and evolution.

PMID:42281994 | PMC:PMC13252542 | DOI:10.21203/rs.3.rs-9900613/v1

Cognitive-Behavioral Predictors of Individual Variability of Functional Connectivity in Healthy Young Adults

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

Res Sq [Preprint]. 2026 Jun 7:rs.3.rs-9683033. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-9683033/v1.

ABSTRACT

While stable patterns of fMRI task-evoked brain activity and functional connectivity (FC) exist at the population level, a growing body of research emphasizes that variability exists across individuals. These differences define the critical idiosyncrasies in cognition and behavior across individuals that make individuals unique. Resting-state fMRI data (60 minutes) were examined from 1012 participants from the HCP dataset of healthy adults between the ages of 22 and 37. Functional connectivity was estimated between 360 regions, and variability was defined by each individual's mean correlational distance (MCD) to all other participants. High MCD indicated a more 'idiosyncratic' connectivity pattern deviating from the group pattern. Hierarchical regression was used to determine predictors of variability in FC. The base model (demographics, sleep, sex, brain volume) explained 9.22% of the variance in heterogeneity in functional connectivity. Increased variance was explained by cognition, squared cognition, and NEO personality scores, while emotional scores and fitness explained no additional variance. The final model explained 11.9% of the variance in MCD. Low MCD (i.e., being closer to average) was associated with higher BMI, greater crystalized cognitive scores, more positive emotional valence, and NEO Agreeableness. Greater variability was associated with age, brain volume (potentially a sex difference), and NEO Extroversion. The model underestimated variability in the highest MCD participants, suggesting unexplained factors in highly variable individuals. Differences were observed between males and females, and monozygotic twins showed similar variability, suggesting a genetic component. These results suggest benefits for a connectivity pattern being more similar to the group average.

PMID:42281972 | PMC:PMC13252532 | DOI:10.21203/rs.3.rs-9683033/v1

Effects of Neural Correlates of Food-Specific Intentional Inhibition in Predicting Body Fat Loss for Overweight and Normal-Weight Young Adults: The Mediation of Restrained Eating

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

Nutrients. 2026 May 23;18(11):1670. doi: 10.3390/nu18111670.

ABSTRACT

Background/Objectives: Intentional inhibition reflects voluntary control abilities and is assumed to be an indicator of overweight. The medial frontal cortex is an important brain region associated with intentional inhibition. Nevertheless, it is uncertain whether being overweight is connected to impaired food-related intentional inhibition (FII), and if so, what its underlying neural correlates are. The present study therefore aims to provide increased support for overweight due to impairment of FII. Methods: Firstly, 55 overweight and 45 normal-weight college students (Sample 1) were instructed to perform a go/no-go/choose task, which included a resting-state fMRI. Neural correlates of FII were examined using regional homogeneity (ReHo) analyses. Subsequently, an additional 180 undergraduates (87 overweight and 93 normal-weight; Sample 2) were examined to ascertain the differences in resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) between overweight and normal-weight participants. The study also investigated whether restrained eating mediated the effect of rsFCs on one-year body index changes. Results: FII demonstrated a positive correlation with the cerebellum, inferior temporal gyrus, orbitofrontal cortex, inferior frontal gyrus, and cingulate gyrus. Additionally, in comparison with participants with normal weight, overweight participants demonstrated diminished rsFC between the FII-related areas and the postcentral gyrus, while heightened rsFC strengths were found between these areas and the middle temporal gyrus and precuneus. Furthermore, mediation analyses demonstrated that cingulate-precuneus connectivity is linked to fat mass index change a year later through restrained eating. Conclusions: FII was associated with connectivity between brain regions involved in inhibitory control and maladaptive eating. Furthermore, we investigated how these connectivity patterns could potentially affect future body fat loss through restrained eating.

PMID:42280314 | DOI:10.3390/nu18111670

MRI-Based Brain Signatures of Chemotherapy-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy in Cancer Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

Diagnostics (Basel). 2026 May 25;16(11):1619. doi: 10.3390/diagnostics16111619.

ABSTRACT

Background: Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common, disabling toxicity with no validated biomarkers. MRI-based functional neuroimaging could offer insight into central pain processing and may reveal reproducible brain signatures of CIPN. Methods: Following PRISMA 2020 (PROSPERO: CRD420251132102), we systematically reviewed whole-brain MRI studies in adult cancer patients with CIPN. Eligible MRI techniques included task-based fMRI, resting-state fMRI, perfusion MRI, and structural MRI. Data were synthesized through voxelwise activation likelihood estimation (ALE), systems-level region-of-interest (ROI) mapping, and proportion meta-analysis of regional involvement. Results: Of 2488 screened records, five observational studies were included. The voxelwise ALE analysis did not identify clusters surviving correction, but dispersed foci appeared within the default mode network (DMN), prefrontal executive cortex, and primary sensorimotor regions, suggesting the engagement of these pain-processing networks. ROI synthesis confirmed consistent alterations in the DMN and executive prefrontal and sensorimotor cortices in CIPN patients compared with controls, while the brainstem/periaqueductal gray and cerebellum were rarely implicated. Proportion meta-analysis further quantified these differences: CIPN patients showed altered involvement in 30% (95% CI 0.16-0.48) of contrasts, with the highest frequencies in the DMN (50%), sensorimotor (33%), and executive prefrontal regions (33%). By contrast, control-higher contrasts were less frequent (10%, 95% CI 0.03-0.27), highlighting CIPN-related increases particularly in self-referential and somatosensory networks. Conclusions: Across analytic approaches, CIPN is characterized by reproducible alterations in the DMN and executive prefrontal and sensorimotor networks. These central pain signatures represent promising MRI-based biomarkers for identifying and monitoring CIPN in oncology.

PMID:42279487 | DOI:10.3390/diagnostics16111619

Multimodal EEG-MRI Neuroimaging in Schizophrenia-A Systematic and Mechanistic Review

Fri, 06/12/2026 - 18:00

J Clin Med. 2026 Jun 2;15(11):4306. doi: 10.3390/jcm15114306.

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Schizophrenia is characterised by distributed abnormalities in electrophysiological dynamics and large-scale brain networks, yet unimodal EEG or MRI alone cannot fully explain how fast neural computations relate to spatially organised circuit dysfunction. Multimodal EEG-MRI approaches offer a bridge across temporal and anatomical scales by explicitly modelling cross-modal coupling. Methods: Following PRISMA 2020 guidance, we conducted a systematic, mechanistic review of human studies (adults ≥ 18 years) comparing schizophrenia-spectrum groups with healthy controls using EEG combined with at least one MRI modality (fMRI, structural MRI, and/or diffusion MRI) and explicit EEG-MRI integration (e.g., EEG-informed fMRI, joint ICA, mCCA/MCCA, coupled matrix-tensor factorisation, DCM-based fusion). Searches were performed in PubMed/MEDLINE, Embase, Web of Science, Scopus, PsycINFO, IEEE Xplore, ResearchGate, and Google Scholar for January 2000-December 2025, supplemented by citation tracking. Risk of bias was assessed with ROBINS-I, and due to heterogeneity, results were synthesised narratively by integration of families. Results: From 148 records, 23 studies met the inclusion criteria. Studies used mainly simultaneous EEG-fMRI at 3T and spanned resting-state designs and task paradigms dominated by auditory processing (oddball, MMN/N100-P200, ASSR/aeGBR), with additional work in affective context, working memory, semantic processing (N400), sensory gating, and pharmacologic challenge. Across tasks, the most reproducible multimodal signature was disrupted coupling between electrophysiological markers and the recruitment of large-scale networks, rather than isolated changes in EEG or fMRI metrics. Target detection/oddball paradigms converged on reduced late ERP responses (especially P300, sometimes N2) alongside reduced expression or loss of coupling to salience/ventral attention and control circuitry (including ACC/anterior insula/TPJ). Resting-state studies most consistently indicated altered "coupling rules" (frequency specificity, timing/lag structure, and directionality), including abnormalities detectable even when unimodal summaries were weak. Extended multimodal studies (adding sMRI/DTI and/or classification) suggested that combining modalities can improve discrimination, though performance was sensitive to sample size, demographic imbalance, and feature-selection/validation choices. Conclusions: Multimodal EEG-MRI studies support schizophrenia as a disorder involving persistent structural and circuit-level abnormalities whose functional expression varies dynamically across cognitive states and task demands. Future progress will depend on harmonised acquisition/artefact-control practices for simultaneous EEG-fMRI, larger and more diverse samples (including early/CHR and longitudinal designs), and cross-site replication of mechanistically interpretable coupling biomarkers.

PMID:42279166 | DOI:10.3390/jcm15114306

Dynamic Mode Decomposition Analysis of Brain Dynamics in Autism Spectrum Disorder Patients

Thu, 06/11/2026 - 18:00

Neuroimage. 2026 Jun 11:122044. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2026.122044. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) has been associated with atypical large-scale brain organization, yet most functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies rely on static connectivity measures that do not explicitly characterize temporal dynamics. Here, we applied dynamic mode decomposition (DMD), a data-driven method that captures recurrent spatiotemporal patterns in terms of temporal persistence and oscillatory timing, to resting-state fMRI data from the Autism Brain Imaging Data Exchange (ABIDE; N = 849). Using a group-level DMD framework with subject-level mode estimation, we identified dynamic modes whose temporal properties differed between individuals with ASD and typically developing (TD) controls. In particular, ASD showed altered oscillatory timing in a posterior visual-parietal-temporal mode, and age-related associations with DMD features differed between ASD and TD groups, suggesting atypical developmental trajectories of large-scale temporal organization. Within the ASD group, DMD features were additionally associated with individual differences in IQ, indicating that temporal brain dynamics partially reflect cognitive heterogeneity in ASD. Spatiotemporal reconstruction and Neurosynth-based spatial correspondence analyses provided descriptive functional context for the extracted modes. Together, these findings suggest that DMD offers a compact framework for characterizing temporal organization of intrinsic brain activity and may capture dimensions of ASD-related neurocognitive variability beyond static connectivity alone. Oscillatory timing here refers to recurrence properties of low-frequency BOLD-derived dynamic modes rather than electrophysiological oscillations measured directly from neural signals.

PMID:42276437 | DOI:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2026.122044

Brain Network Properties in Treatment-Resistant Schizophrenia Patients and Their Healthy Siblings

Thu, 06/11/2026 - 18:00

Behav Brain Res. 2026 Jun 11:116334. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2026.116334. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To explore brain network topological properties in treatment-resistant schizophrenia patients and their healthy siblings, identify genetic susceptibility markers and protective factors of the disease, and assist clinical diagnosis and treatment.

METHODS: 28 treatment-resistant schizophrenia patients (after excluding two for head motion), 25 healthy siblings, and 38 healthy controls were enrolled. Resting-state functional brain networks were constructed using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data. Topological properties were analyzed via graph theory, followed by statistical and correlation analyses with clinical symptom scales.

RESULTS: 1. No significant difference in small-world properties among the three groups. 2. No difference in global efficiency. 3. No difference in local efficiency. 4. In the sibling group, nodal efficiency and degree centrality of the bilateral amygdala and right hippocampus were lower than those in healthy controls, while those of the right thalamus were lower than in patients. 5. Right thalamus properties in patients negatively correlated with PANSS scores and positively correlated with WAIS digit symbol scores.

CONCLUSION: Healthy siblings show brain network abnormalities, while patients have higher right thalamic metrics than siblings but do not differ from controls. The right thalamus correlates negatively with negative symptoms; this is observational, not a prognostic indicator. Whether this reflects compensation (e.g., thalamic compensation) remains speculative. Brain network abnormalities might tentatively suggest genetic susceptibility, and siblings could have protective factors. All findings are preliminary and require validation.

PMID:42276286 | DOI:10.1016/j.bbr.2026.116334

Cortical synchrony is reduced in Alzheimer's disease and relates to arousal state

Thu, 06/11/2026 - 18:00

Alzheimers Dement. 2026 Jun;22(6):e71547. doi: 10.1002/alz.71547.

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The brain is a complex dynamical system, influenced by arousal state. Cortical synchrony supports information processing and is disrupted in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Locus coeruleus (LC) integrity and pupillometry index arousal system structure and function.

METHODS: Sixty-four AD and 26 controls underwent resting-state pupillometry-fMRI. Neuromelanin MRI and Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination were conducted. Mean and standard deviation of blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) phase coherence yielded synchrony and metastability, respectively. Leading Eigenvector Dynamics Analysis (LEiDA) produced coherence-based states.

RESULTS: AD had reduced global synchrony [b = -0.90, p < 0.001], metastability [b = -0.61, p < 0.01], LEiDA "global coherence state" occupancy [b = -0.06, p < 0.01], and LC integrity [b = -0.37, p = 0.01]. Synchrony [b = 0.19, p = 0.01] and LC integrity [b = 0.17, p < 0.01] related to cognition and one another [b = 0.27, p = 0.01]. Pupil-linked arousal correlated with synchrony and global coherence state maintenance.

DISCUSSION: In health, cortical activity shows widespread but dynamic synchrony across regions to meet changing demands. In AD, arousal dysfunction appears to disrupt these dynamics, impacting cognition.

PMID:42273876 | PMC:PMC13254816 | DOI:10.1002/alz.71547

Altered anterior cingulate cortex functional connectivity in treatment-naive obsessive-compulsive disorder: a resting-state fMRI study

Thu, 06/11/2026 - 18:00

Front Psychiatry. 2026 May 26;17:1835812. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1835812. eCollection 2026.

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) resting-state functional connectivity patterns in OCD patients who have not yet received therapy and analyze how they relate to the intensity of their clinical symptoms.

METHODS: Resting-state fMRI data were acquired from 46 medication-naïve participants with OCD and 33 demographically comparable neurotypical control subjects. The region of focus for the seed-based whole-brain functional connectivity investigation was bilateral ACC. Relationships between aberrant connections and clinical characteristics measured by the Y-BOCS, HAMD-17, and HAMA were investigated using Pearson's correlation coefficient and partial correlation analysis.

RESULTS: Key findings (OCD patients vs. healthy controls): Increased functional connectivity (FC) in OCD patients: Right insula (Brodmann area 48), Right hippocampus (BA 20), Right fusiform gyrus (BA 37); Decreased FC involving the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) with: Right supplementary motor area (SMA, BA 32), Left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG, BA 47) (AlphaSim corrected, P < 0.05). Clinical association: There was a significant positive relationship between Y-BOCS total scores (a measure of OCD symptom severity) and FC strength linking the left IFG to the ACC (r = 0.351, P = 0.017). In practical terms, greater symptom severity is associated with stronger coupling between these two regions. No other clear brain-behavior relationships were found in the other regions examined.

CONCLUSION: Treatment-naïve OCD patients demonstrate distinct ACC functional connectivity alterations involving cognitive control, motor planning, and limbic processing regions. The specific association between left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG)-ACC connectivity and symptom severity suggests that this pathway may serve as a neurobiological marker for OCD pathophysiology.

PMID:42273591 | PMC:PMC13248406 | DOI:10.3389/fpsyt.2026.1835812

Investigation of the topological properties of brain structural and functional networks in patients with mild cognitive impairment

Thu, 06/11/2026 - 18:00

Quant Imaging Med Surg. 2026 Jun 1;16(6):492. doi: 10.21037/qims-2026-1-0066. Epub 2026 May 13.

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a transitional stage between subjective cognitive decline and Alzheimer's dementia, representing a critical window for intervention. We characterize the small-world properties of brain networks in MCI to identify sensitive biomarkers for early detection and assessment.

METHODS: Thirty-one patients diagnosed with MCI were recruited as the experimental group, while 30 healthy elderly individuals served as the normal control (NC) group. Based on diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI), small-world properties of the brain networks were observed using graph theory analysis. Global and nodal properties were computed to assess differences in brain network topology.

RESULTS: Both structural and functional brain networks in the MCI and NC groups exhibited small-world properties (σ>1), and significant differences were noted in nodal properties such as nodal efficiency, nodal degree centrality, and nodal shortest path length (P<0.05). Importantly, these nodal properties in brain regions were significantly correlated with Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) scores in patients with MCI (P<0.05).

CONCLUSIONS: Patients with MCI exhibit small-world properties in their brain networks, suggesting preserved efficiency of information transfer. Node property metrics in regions such as the posterior cingulate cortex, prefrontal cortex, and occipital lobe are promising biomarkers for early detection of MCI.

PMID:42273161 | PMC:PMC13247931 | DOI:10.21037/qims-2026-1-0066

Classification of multivariate functional data with an application to ADHD fMRI data

Thu, 06/11/2026 - 18:00

J Appl Stat. 2025 Nov 23;53(8):1515-1537. doi: 10.1080/02664763.2025.2567979. eCollection 2026.

ABSTRACT

The classification of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) data presents unique challenges in the detection and diagnosis of neuropsychiatric disorders such as Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). Traditional classification approaches often prove inadequate when handling complex spatiotemporal patterns and high-dimensional fMRI data, particularly when significant variations exist both between and within diagnostic groups. To address these limitations, we introduce a novel classification framework that integrates three complementary analytical components: elastic registration for curve alignment, geometric curve length computation for capturing signal variability, and sparse principal component analysis for dimensionality reduction. Extensive simulation studies show that our proposed method significantly outperforms existing approaches, especially in scenarios where groups exhibit distinct variation patterns rather than mean differences in their functional curves. When applied to the ADHD-200 dataset, our method achieves classification accuracy rates substantially exceeding conventional approaches. The proposed framework's ability to capture subtle variability differences while maintaining computational efficiency makes it particularly valuable for biomarker discovery and clinical applications in neuropsychiatric research. Our approach's focus on signal variability rather than mean activation patterns offers new insights into the dynamic nature of brain activity differences in ADHD and provides a promising foundation for analyzing other neurological conditions.

PMID:42272799 | PMC:PMC13248495 | DOI:10.1080/02664763.2025.2567979