2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11571-016-9407-z
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Parameterizable consensus connectomes from the Human Connectome Project: the Budapest Reference Connectome Server v3.0

Abstract: Connections of the living human brain, on a macroscopic scale, can be mapped by a diffusion MR imaging based workflow. Since the same anatomic regions can be corresponded between distinct brains, one can compare the presence or the absence of the edges, connecting the very same two anatomic regions, among multiple cortices. Previously, we have constructed the consensus braingraphs on 1015 vertices first in five, then in 96 subjects in the Budapest Reference Connectome Server v1.0 and v2.0, respectively. Here w… Show more

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Cited by 59 publications
(67 citation statements)
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“…In the articles [10,8] we have described the Budapest Reference Connectome Server https://connectome.pitgroup.org, which generates parameter-ized consensus connectomes from hundreds of braingraphs. The Budapest Reference Connectome Server led us to the discovery of the phenomenon of the Consensus Connectome Dynamics [14], and consequently, to a novel method for directing the edges of the human connectomes, gained from diffusion weighted MR imaging data [7,9,15].…”
Section: Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the articles [10,8] we have described the Budapest Reference Connectome Server https://connectome.pitgroup.org, which generates parameter-ized consensus connectomes from hundreds of braingraphs. The Budapest Reference Connectome Server led us to the discovery of the phenomenon of the Consensus Connectome Dynamics [14], and consequently, to a novel method for directing the edges of the human connectomes, gained from diffusion weighted MR imaging data [7,9,15].…”
Section: Previous Workmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This approach will not consider rarely appearing errors, since if we deal with substructures, which appear with a minimum frequency of 80% or 90%, then the infrequent errors will be filtered out. The Budapest Reference Connectome Server generates the kfrequent edges [12,13]. In the work [29] we have mapped the frequently appearing subgraphs of the human connectome.…”
Section: Robust Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have computed hundreds of braingraphs [5], and prepared the Budapest Reference Connectome Server, which generates the graph of k-frequent edges of the human connectome of n=477 people, where 1 ≤ k ≤ n, and the k-frequent edges are those, which are present in at least k braingraphs out of the n=477. The parameter k is selectable, along with other parameters at the webserver https://pitgroup.org/connectome/, and the resulting consensus graph can be visualized and downloaded from the site [12,13].…”
Section: The Graph-theoretical Analysis Of the Braingraphmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…If there were no any variability among the connectomes of the individual subjects, then in each connectome, the left hippocampus would be connected to the very same set of other nodes or ROIs. However, there is a considerable variability of these connections between distinct subjects [19,20,21]. Therefore, no such common neighbor-set exists for any vertex in the braingraphs.…”
Section: Our Contribution: the Frequent Network Neighborhood Mappingmentioning
confidence: 99%