The arrow of time of brain signals in cognition: Potential intriguing role of parts of the default mode network
Gustavo Deco, Yonatan Sanz Perl, Laura de la Fuente, Jacobo Sitt, B.T. Thomas Yeo, Enzo Tagliazucchi, Morten L. Kringelbach
Network Neuroscience December 23, 2022 DOI: 10.1162/netn_a_00300 via OpenAlex
Summary
The default mode network (DMN) may coordinate the recruitment and scheduling of brain networks for solving cognitive tasks, supported by evidence that DMN regions are physically and functionally distant from sensorimotor areas. Using a thermodynamics-inspired, deep learning-based Temporal Evolution NETwork (TENET) framework to measure the 'arrow of time'—a marker of nonreversibility and hierarchy in brain signals—analysis of Human Connectome Project data from nearly a thousand participants suggests the DMN orchestrates hierarchy levels that shift between rest and seven cognitive tasks. This hierarchy differs significantly in health versus neuropsychiatric disorders, offering insights into brain dynamics for cognition.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Observational cohort Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Population | Human participants from the Human Connectome Project |
| Topics | Default mode network |
| Keywords | Human connectome project Cognition Computer science Hierarchy |
| Citations | 43 |
| Key finding | The DMN plays a significant role in orchestrating the hierarchy of nonreversibility in brain dynamics, which changes between resting state and cognitive tasks and differs in health versus neuropsychiatric disorders. |
Abstract
A promising idea in human cognitive neuroscience is that the default mode network (DMN) is responsible for coordinating the recruitment and scheduling of networks for computing and solving task-specific cognitive problems. This is supported by evidence showing that the physical and functional distance of DMN regions is maximally removed from sensorimotor regions containing environment-driven neural activity directly linked to perception and action, which would allow the DMN to orchestrate complex cognition from the top of the hierarchy. However, discovering the functional hierarchy of brain dynamics requires finding the best way to measure interactions between brain regions. In contrast to previous methods measuring the hierarchical flow of information using, for example, transfer entropy, here we used a thermodynamics-inspired, deep learning based Temporal Evolution NETwork (TENET) framework to assess the asymmetry in the flow of events, 'arrow of time', in human brain signals. This provides an alternative way of quantifying hierarchy, given that the arrow of time measures the directionality of information flow that leads to a breaking of the balance of the underlying hierarchy. In turn, the arrow of time is a measure of nonreversibility and thus nonequilibrium in brain dynamics. When applied to large-scale Human Connectome Project (HCP) neuroimaging data from close to a thousand participants, the TENET framework suggests that the DMN plays a significant role in orchestrating the hierarchy, that is, levels of nonreversibility, which changes between the resting state and when performing seven different cognitive tasks. Furthermore, this quantification of the hierarchy of the resting state is significantly different in health compared to neuropsychiatric disorders. Overall, the present thermodynamics-based machine-learning framework provides vital new insights into the fundamental tenets of brain dynamics for orchestrating the interactions between cognition and brain in complex environments.