A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition

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A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition. / Jackson, Rebecca L; Humphreys, Gina F; Rice, Grace E. et al.
Yn: Cortex, Cyfrol 165, 08.2023, t. 141-159.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Jackson, RL, Humphreys, GF, Rice, GE, Binney, RJ & Lambon Ralph, MA 2023, 'A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition', Cortex, cyfrol. 165, tt. 141-159.

APA

Jackson, R. L., Humphreys, G. F., Rice, G. E., Binney, R. J., & Lambon Ralph, M. A. (2023). A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition. Cortex, 165, 141-159.

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MLA

VancouverVancouver

Jackson RL, Humphreys GF, Rice GE, Binney RJ, Lambon Ralph MA. A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition. Cortex. 2023 Awst;165:141-159. Epub 2023 Mai 16.

Author

Jackson, Rebecca L ; Humphreys, Gina F ; Rice, Grace E. et al. / A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition. Yn: Cortex. 2023 ; Cyfrol 165. tt. 141-159.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Network-level Test of the Role of the Co-activated Default Mode Network in Episodic Recall and Social Cognition

AU - Jackson, Rebecca L

AU - Humphreys, Gina F

AU - Rice, Grace E.

AU - Binney, Richard J

AU - Lambon Ralph, Matthew A

PY - 2023/8

Y1 - 2023/8

N2 - Resting-state network research is extremely influential, yet the functions of many networks remain unknown. In part, this is due to typical (e.g., univariate) analyses independently testing the function of individual regions and not examining the full set of regions that form a network whilst co-activated. Connectivity is dynamic and the function of a region may change based on its current connections. Therefore, determining the function of a network requires assessment at this network-level. Yet popular theories implicating the default mode network (DMN) in episodic memory and social cognition, rest principally upon analyses performed at the level of individual brain regions. Here we use independent component analysis to formally test the role of the DMN in episodic and social processing at the network level. As well as an episodic retrieval task, two independent datasets were employed to assess DMN function across the breadth of social cognition; a person knowledge judgement and a theory of mind task. Each task dataset was separated into networks of co-activated regions. In each, the co-activated DMN, was identified through comparison to an a priori template and its relation to the task model assessed. This co-activated DMN did not show greater activity in episodic or social tasks than high-level baseline conditions. Thus, no evidence was found to support hypotheses that the co-activated DMN is involved in explicit episodic or social tasks at a network-level. The networks associated with these processes are described. Implications for prior univariate findings and the functional significance of the co-activated DMN are considered.

AB - Resting-state network research is extremely influential, yet the functions of many networks remain unknown. In part, this is due to typical (e.g., univariate) analyses independently testing the function of individual regions and not examining the full set of regions that form a network whilst co-activated. Connectivity is dynamic and the function of a region may change based on its current connections. Therefore, determining the function of a network requires assessment at this network-level. Yet popular theories implicating the default mode network (DMN) in episodic memory and social cognition, rest principally upon analyses performed at the level of individual brain regions. Here we use independent component analysis to formally test the role of the DMN in episodic and social processing at the network level. As well as an episodic retrieval task, two independent datasets were employed to assess DMN function across the breadth of social cognition; a person knowledge judgement and a theory of mind task. Each task dataset was separated into networks of co-activated regions. In each, the co-activated DMN, was identified through comparison to an a priori template and its relation to the task model assessed. This co-activated DMN did not show greater activity in episodic or social tasks than high-level baseline conditions. Thus, no evidence was found to support hypotheses that the co-activated DMN is involved in explicit episodic or social tasks at a network-level. The networks associated with these processes are described. Implications for prior univariate findings and the functional significance of the co-activated DMN are considered.

KW - default mode network

KW - Episodic memory

KW - independent component analysis

KW - resting-state networks

KW - Social cognition

M3 - Article

VL - 165

SP - 141

EP - 159

JO - Cortex

JF - Cortex

SN - 0010-9452

ER -