Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9197899 | NeuroImage | 2005 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
Cores did not differ between the two groups, either in terms of integration or in terms of functional clustering index. However, the core was still highly integrated with the rest and the rest was overly integrated in schizophrenic subjects. Both anomalies were correlated with the negative symptoms. These findings were consistent regardless of the task considered. Furthermore, within the core, anterior-posterior correlations were lower in patients (between the frontal and the parietal and posterior cingulate cortices), whereas frontal left-right correlations were excessive. No significant correlation was found with the medication. Thus, it appears that schizophrenia entails a deleterious combination of too much “noisy” integration (from the rest) and too little “significant” integration (anterior-posterior functional connectivity).
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Authors
J.R. Foucher, P. Vidailhet, S. Chanraud, D. Gounot, D. Grucker, D. Pins, C. Damsa, J.-M. Danion,