“…Another limitation is that neither parcellation used included the cerebellum, whose role in anaestheticâinduced loss of consciousness deserves further investigation. Finally, cartographic profile based on slidingâwindows is one among a rapidly expanding number of ways to investigate brain dynamics (Allen et al, 2014; Atasoy, Donnelly, & Pearson, 2016; Atasoy et al, 2017; Atasoy, Vohryzek, Deco, Carhartâharris, & Kringelbach, 2018; Barttfeld et al, 2015; Cai, Wang, et al, 2020; Cai, Wei, et al, 2020; Cao et al, 2019; Deco et al, 2019; Demertzi et al, 2019; Eagleman, Chander, Reynolds, Ouellette, & MacIver, 2019; Eagleman et al, 2018; Fukushima et al, 2018; Hahn et al, 2020; Huang et al, 2020; Hutchison, Hutchison, Manning, Menon, & Everling, 2014; Hutchison et al, 2013; Lee et al, 2019; D. Li et al, 2019; Y. Li et al, 2020; Lord et al, 2019; Luppi, Vohryzek, Jakub, Kringelbach, et al, 2020; Lurie et al, 2020; Preti et al, 2017; Riehl et al, 2017; Shine et al, 2016, 2019; Standage et al, 2020; Uhrig et al, 2018; Varley, Denny, Sporns, & Patania, 2020; Vlisides et al, 2019; Vohryzek, Deco, Cessac, Kringelbach, & Cabral, 2020; Zamani Esfahlani et al, 2020; Y. Zhang et al, 2019, 2020). Each approach inevitably comes with both strengths and limitations, although converging evidence is already beginning to emerge across different methods.…”