English

Warnings and Caveats in Brain Controllability

Neurons and Cognition 2018-07-10 v1 Biological Physics

Abstract

In this work we challenge the main conclusions of Gu et al work (Controllability of structural brain networks. Nature communications 6, 8414, doi:10.1038/ncomms9414, 2015) on brain controllability. Using the same methods and analyses on four datasets we find that the minimum set of nodes to control brain networks is always larger than one. We also find that the relationships between the average/modal controllability and weighted degrees also hold for randomized data and the there are not specific roles played by Resting State Networks in controlling the brain. In conclusion, we show that there is no evidence that topology plays specific and unique roles in the controllability of brain networks. Accordingly, Gu et al. interpretation of their results, in particular in terms of translational applications (e.g. using single node controllability properties to define target region(s) for neurostimulation) should be revisited. Though theoretically intriguing, our understanding of the relationship between controllability and structural brain network remains elusive.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1705.08261,
  title  = {Warnings and Caveats in Brain Controllability},
  author = {Chengyi Tu and Rodrigo P. Rocha and Maurizio Corbetta and Sandro Zampieri and Marzo Zorzi and Samir Suweis},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1705.08261},
  year   = {2018}
}

Comments

9 pages, 1 Figure, 1 Table

R2 v1 2026-06-22T19:56:21.901Z