
BRAIN MAPPictured is the first complete, high-resolution map of the human cerebral cortex. The new view pinpoints a central hub for coordinating activity in the entire brain, and also suggests that the brain's anatomy determines its activity.Indiana University
Hub systems may be frustrating for airline
travelers, but a central hub keeps the brain connected and humming, a
first-ever wiring diagram of the human brain reveals.
Nearly all of the information transmitted from one
brain region to another passes through a core located in the center and back of
the brain along the crack that separates the two hemispheres, an international
group of researchers reports in the June 30 PLoS
Biology.
Earlier research pinpointed an area of the brain
called the default network — a group of brain regions that are active when a
person is thinking about nothing in particular. The new map of the brain’s
anatomy showed that, in fact, the default network also resides in this physical
hub, the core of the brain.
“Our map is a very crude one,” says Olaf Sporns, a
computational neuroscientist at Indiana
University in Bloomington. But the wiring diagram is a
first step toward understanding how the brain is structured and how it communicates.
Such diagrams could help therapists design strategies to improve recovery of
stroke victims or people with other brain injuries.
The new study “takes the idea of the intrinsic
organization of the brain to a new level,” says Marcus Raichle, a neurologist
at Washington University
in St. Louis.
The research reveals that “there are hubs in the brain and some hubs are more
important than others. This one rises to the top of the pile.”
Differences among individuals in brain wiring may
also affect how people think, and may influence how vulnerable people are to
certain diseases and disorders. For instance, the core structure identified in
the new study is the part of the brain most susceptible to Alzheimer’s disease.
Raichle first described the default network in
2001. He had noticed that when subjects in functional MRI studies were asked to
do a specific task, such as remembering a string of words, certain parts of
their brains became less active while others increased activity. Most researchers
are interested only in “what goes up,” Raichle says, but he was interested in
the areas that decreased activity.
He started a file on the “Medial Mystery Parietal
Area”: the medial parietal area, or center and back of the brain. The mystery
is why this part of the brain had lower activity when a person was actively
thinking.
Deepening the mystery, Raichle and colleagues found
that the area is part of the network of brain areas most active when the brain
is at rest.
Of course, brains never really rest. When not
actively engaged, they reflect on personal history, mind-wander, daydream or
think about nothing in particular.
“It’s not resting at all. It’s going full-tilt,”
Raichle says. In fact, although the brain makes up about 2 percent of an
average adult’s body weight, it consumes 20 percent of calories burned each
day. And the default network uses about 30 percent more energy than average for
other brain regions.
“It is running very hot,” Sporns agrees.
Sporns and his colleagues Patric Hagmann at the University of Lausanne
in Switzerland and Van
Wedeen at Harvard
University used a
technique called diffusion spectrum imaging to map the connections between different
parts of the brain. The technique traces the path of water moving along axons,
long fibers that extend from a neuron’s main body and carry electrical signals.
The researchers were gratified to find that their
structural map matched the networks revealed by fMRI, Sporns says.
Computer models of the connections suggest that the
brain’s activity may be a product of its anatomy.
“The fact that we engage in certain mental
operations at certain times may emerge naturally from the way the brain is wired,”
Sporns says. He and his colleagues plan to test whether mental illness and
degenerative brain disease can be traced to short circuits in the wiring
diagram.
Found in: Body & Brain