Celebrating 10 Years | 2021

The Society for Neuroscience launched its gold open-access journal in November 2014. As founding Editor-in-Chief Christophe Bernard said in his editorial, “eNeuro at Ten: Just Warming Up,” “eNeuro was designed to serve the community of neuroscientists.”

To celebrate 10 years of eNeuro, throughout the year the blog will highlight findings of some of the most-cited papers published in each year of the journal’s history.

2021

A Whole-Cortex Probabilistic Diffusion Tractography Connectome
Burke Q. Rosen and Eric Halgren

With existing data from the Wu-Minn Human Connectome project of over 1,000 people and the use of many reliable statistical tests, Rosen and Halgren presented a probabilistic diffusion tractography full-cortex connectome that remains publicly available for the neuroscience community to access. The atlas they created revealed inaccuracies in predictions about connectivity based on brain volume and resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging correlations.

 

Neuronal Cascades Shape Whole-Brain Functional Dynamics at Rest
Giovanni Rabuffo, Jan Fousek, Christophe Bernard, and Viktor Jirsa

Rabuffo et al. used connectome-based modeling to better understand the neural underpinnings of functional connectivity. Their model linked neuronal activation at a microscopic scale to resting state-like conditions, which was validated by comparing dynamic fluctuations and co-fluctuations in mouse fMRI recordings and simultaneous fMRI and EEG recordings in humans. This study helped improve our understanding of slow resting state brain activity.

Category: Featured Finding
Tags: Neuroscience Research, Integrative Systems, Novel Tools and Methods