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Featured researches published by Jianfu Li.


Epilepsy Research | 2014

Diffusion tensor tractography reveals disrupted structural connectivity in childhood absence epilepsy

Kaiqing Xue; Cheng Luo; Dan Zhang; Tianhua Yang; Jianfu Li; Diankun Gong; Long Chen; Yasser Iturria Medina; Jean Gotman; Dong Zhou; Dezhong Yao

PURPOSE The structural connection patterns of the human brain are the underlying bases for functional connectivity. Although abnormal functional connectivity has been uncovered in childhood absence epilepsy (CAE) in previous electroencephalography and functional magnetic resonance imaging studies, little is known regarding the structural connectivity in CAE. We hypothesized that the structural connectivity would be disrupted in response to the decreased brain function in CAE. METHODS Diffusion tensor imaging tractography was utilized to map the white matter (WM) structural network, composed of 90 cortical and sub-cortical regions, in 18 CAE and 18 age- and gender-matched healthy controls. Graph theoretical methods were applied to investigate the alterations in the topological and nodal properties of the networks in these patients. RESULTS Both the CAE and the controls showed small-world properties in their WM networks. However, the network connection strength, absolute clustering coefficient, and global/local efficiency were significantly decreased, but characteristic path length was significantly increased in the CAE compared with the controls. Significantly decreased WM connections, nodal properties, and impaired sub-networks were found in the sub-cortical structures, orbitofrontal area, and limbic cortex in the CAE. Moreover, network connection strength, local efficiency, and nodal features in some regions were significantly negatively correlated with the duration of epilepsy. CONCLUSIONS The present study demonstrated, for the first time, the disrupted topological organization of WM networks in CAE. The decreased connectivity and efficiency in the orbitofrontal and sub-cortical regions may serve as anatomical evidence to support the functional abnormalities related to the epileptic discharges observed in CAE. Moreover, the orbitofrontal sub-network may play a key role in CAE. These findings open up new avenues toward the understanding of absence epilepsy.


Neural Plasticity | 2014

Long-Term Effects of Musical Training and Functional Plasticity in Salience System

Cheng Luo; Shipeng Tu; Yueheng Peng; Shan Gao; Jianfu Li; Li Dong; Gujing Li; Yongxiu Lai; Hong Li; Dezhong Yao

Musicians undergoing long-term musical training show improved emotional and cognitive function, which suggests the presence of neuroplasticity. The structural and functional impacts of the human brain have been observed in musicians. In this study, we used data-driven functional connectivity analysis to map local and distant functional connectivity in resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging data from 28 professional musicians and 28 nonmusicians. Compared with nonmusicians, musicians exhibited significantly greater local functional connectivity density in 10 regions, including the bilateral dorsal anterior cingulate cortex, anterior insula, and anterior temporoparietal junction. A distant functional connectivity analysis demonstrated that most of these regions were included in salience system, which is associated with high-level cognitive control and fundamental attentional process. Additionally, musicians had significantly greater functional integration in this system, especially for connections to the left insula. Increased functional connectivity between the left insula and right temporoparietal junction may be a response to long-term musical training. Our findings indicate that the improvement of salience network is involved in musical training. The salience system may represent a new avenue for exploration regarding the underlying foundations of enhanced higher-level cognitive processes in musicians.


Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience | 2014

Resting-state functional connectivity in anterior cingulate cortex in normal aging

Weifang Cao; Cheng Luo; Bin Zhu; Dan Zhang; Li Dong; Jinnan Gong; Diankun Gong; Hui He; Shipeng Tu; Wenjie Yin; Jianfu Li; Huafu Chen; Dezhong Yao

Growing evidence suggests that normal aging is associated with cognitive decline and well-maintained emotional well-being. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is an important brain region involved in emotional and cognitive processing. We investigated resting-state functional connectivity (FC) of two ACC subregions in 30 healthy older adults vs. 33 healthy younger adults, by parcellating into rostral (rACC) and dorsal (dACC) ACC based on clustering of FC profiles. Compared with younger adults, older adults demonstrated greater connection between rACC and anterior insula, suggesting that older adults recruit more proximal dACC brain regions connected with insula to maintain a salient response. Older adults also demonstrated increased FC between rACC and superior temporal gyrus and inferior frontal gyrus, decreased integration between rACC and default mode, and decreased dACC-hippocampal and dACC-thalamic connectivity. These altered FCs reflected rACC and dACC reorganization, and might be related to well emotion regulation and cognitive decline in older adults. Our findings provide further insight into potential functional substrates of emotional and cognitive alterations in the aging brain.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Probabilistic diffusion tractography reveals improvement of structural network in musicians.

Jianfu Li; Cheng Luo; Yueheng Peng; Qiankun Xie; Jinnan Gong; Li Dong; Yongxiu Lai; Hong Li; Dezhong Yao

Purpose Musicians experience a large amount of information transfer and integration of complex sensory, motor, and auditory processes when training and playing musical instruments. Therefore, musicians are a useful model in which to investigate neural adaptations in the brain. Methods Here, based on diffusion-weighted imaging, probabilistic tractography was used to determine the architecture of white matter anatomical networks in musicians and non-musicians. Furthermore, the features of the white matter networks were analyzed using graph theory. Results Small-world properties of the white matter network were observed in both groups. Compared with non-musicians, the musicians exhibited significantly increased connectivity strength in the left and right supplementary motor areas, the left calcarine fissure and surrounding cortex and the right caudate nucleus, as well as a significantly larger weighted clustering coefficient in the right olfactory cortex, the left medial superior frontal gyrus, the right gyrus rectus, the left lingual gyrus, the left supramarginal gyrus, and the right pallidum. Furthermore, there were differences in the node betweenness centrality in several regions. However, no significant differences in topological properties were observed at a global level. Conclusions We illustrated preliminary findings to extend the network level understanding of white matter plasticity in musicians who have had long-term musical training. These structural, network-based findings may indicate that musicians have enhanced information transmission efficiencies in local white matter networks that are related to musical training.


Journal of Affective Disorders | 2017

Transdiagnostic differences in the resting-state functional connectivity of the prefrontal cortex in depression and schizophrenia

Xi Chen; Chang Liu; Hui He; Xin Chang; Yuchao Jiang; Yingjia Li; Mingjun Duan; Jianfu Li; Cheng Luo; Dezhong Yao

BACKGROUND Depression and schizophrenia are two of the most serious psychiatric disorders. They share similar symptoms but the pathology-specific commonalities and differences remain unknown. This study was conducted to acquire a full picture of the functional alterations in schizophrenia and depression patients. METHODS The resting-state fMRI data from 20 patients with schizophrenia, 20 patients with depression and 20 healthy control subjects were collected. A data-driven approach that included local functional connectivity density (FCD) analysis combined with multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) was used to compare the three groups. RESULTS Based on the results of the MVPA, the local FCD value in the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) can differentiate depression patients from schizophrenia patients. The patients with depression had a higher local FCD value in the medial and anterior parts of the OFC than the subjects in the other two groups, which suggested altered abstract and reward reinforces processing in depression patients. Subsequent functional connectivity analysis indicated that the connection in the prefrontal cortex was significantly lower in people with schizophrenia compared to people with depression and healthy controls. LIMITATION The systematically different medications for schizophrenia and depression may have different effects on functional connectivity. CONCLUSIONS These results suggested that the resting-state functional connectivity pattern in the prefrontal cortex may be a transdiagnostic difference between depression and schizophrenia patients.


NeuroImage | 2018

White-matter functional networks changes in patients with schizophrenia

Yuchao Jiang; Cheng Luo; Xuan Li; Yingjia Li; Hang Yang; Jianfu Li; Xin Chang; Hechun Li; Huanghao Yang; Jijun Wang; Mingjun Duan; Dezhong Yao

ABSTRACT Resting‐state functional MRI (rsfMRI) is a useful technique for investigating the functional organization of human gray‐matter in neuroscience and neuropsychiatry. Nevertheless, most studies have demonstrated the functional connectivity and/or task‐related functional activity in the gray‐matter. White‐matter functional networks have been investigated in healthy subjects. Schizophrenia has been hypothesized to be a brain disorder involving insufficient or ineffective communication associated with white‐matter abnormalities. However, previous studies have mainly examined the structural architecture of white‐matter using MRI or diffusion tensor imaging and failed to uncover any dysfunctional connectivity within the white‐matter on rsfMRI. The current study used rsfMRI to evaluate white‐matter functional connectivity in a large cohort of ninety‐seven schizophrenia patients and 126 healthy controls. Ten large‐scale white‐matter networks were identified by a cluster analysis of voxel‐based white‐matter functional connectivity and classified into superficial, middle and deep layers of networks. Evaluation of the spontaneous oscillation of white‐matter networks and the functional connectivity between them showed that patients with schizophrenia had decreased amplitudes of low‐frequency oscillation and increased functional connectivity in the superficial perception‐motor networks. Additionally, we examined the interactions between white‐matter and gray‐matter networks. The superficial perception‐motor white‐matter network had decreased functional connectivity with the cortical perception‐motor gray‐matter networks. In contrast, the middle and deep white‐matter networks had increased functional connectivity with the superficial perception‐motor white‐matter network and the cortical perception‐motor gray‐matter network. Thus, we presumed that the disrupted association between the gray‐matter and white‐matter networks in the perception‐motor system may be compensated for through the middle‐deep white‐matter networks, which may be the foundation of the extensively disrupted connections in schizophrenia. HighlightsWhite‐matter FC was investigated based on resting‐state fMRI.Ten white‐matter networks were defined by clustering analysis on voxel‐wise FC.Abnormalities of perception‐motor white‐matter networks in schizophrenia.The disrupted associations between gray‐matter and white‐matter networks.


Frontiers in Neuroinformatics | 2018

Neuroscience Information Toolbox: An Open Source Toolbox for EEG–fMRI Multimodal Fusion Analysis

Li Dong; Cheng Luo; Xiaobo Liu; Sisi Jiang; Fali Li; Hongshuo Feng; Jianfu Li; Diankun Gong; Dezhong Yao

Recently, scalp electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) multimodal fusion has been pursued in an effort to study human brain function and dysfunction to obtain more comprehensive information on brain activity in which the spatial and temporal resolutions are both satisfactory. However, a more flexible and easy-to-use toolbox for EEG–fMRI multimodal fusion is still lacking. In this study, we therefore developed a freely available and open-source MATLAB graphical user interface toolbox, known as the Neuroscience Information Toolbox (NIT), for EEG–fMRI multimodal fusion analysis. The NIT consists of three modules: (1) the fMRI module, which has batch fMRI preprocessing, nuisance signal removal, bandpass filtering, and calculation of resting-state measures; (2) the EEG module, which includes artifact removal, extracting EEG features (event onset, power, and amplitude), and marking interesting events; and (3) the fusion module, in which fMRI-informed EEG analysis and EEG-informed fMRI analysis are included. The NIT was designed to provide a convenient and easy-to-use toolbox for researchers, especially for novice users. The NIT can be downloaded for free at http://www.neuro.uestc.edu.cn/NIT.html, and detailed information, including the introduction of NIT, user’s manual and example data sets, can also be observed on this website. We hope that the NIT is a promising toolbox for exploring brain information in various EEG and fMRI studies.


Frontiers in Computational Neuroscience | 2017

Altered Local Spatiotemporal Consistency of Resting-State BOLD Signals in Patients with Generalized Tonic-Clonic Seizures

Shuai Ma; Sisi Jiang; Rui Peng; Qiong Zhu; Hongbin Sun; Jianfu Li; Xiaoyan Jia; Ilan Goldberg; Liang Yu; Cheng Luo

The purpose of this study was to evaluate the spatiotemporal Consistency of spontaneous activities in local brain regions in patients with generalized tonic-clonic seizures (GTCS). The resting-state fMRI data were acquired from nineteen patients with GTCS and twenty-two matched healthy subjects. FOur-dimensional (spatiotemporal) Consistency of local neural Activities (FOCA) metric was used to analyze the spontaneous activity in whole brain. The FOCA difference between two groups were detected using a two sample t-test analysis. Correlations between the FOCA values and features of seizures were analyzed. The findings of this study showed that patients had significantly increased FOCA in motor-related cortex regions, including bilateral supplementary motor area, paracentral lobule, precentral gyrus and left basal ganglia, as well as a substantial reduction of FOCA in regions of default mode network (DMN) and parietal lobe. In addition, several brain regions in DMN demonstrated more reduction with longer duration of epilepsy and later onset age, and the motor-related regions showed higher FOCA value in accompany with later onset age. These findings implicated the abnormality of motor-related cortical network in GTCS which were associated with the genesis and propagation of epileptiform activity. And the decreased FOCA in DMN might reflect the intrinsic disturbance of brain activity. Moreover, our study supported that the FOCA might be potential tool to investigate local brain spontaneous activity related with the epileptic activity, and to provide important insights into understanding the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of GTCS.


Neural Plasticity | 2018

The Effects of Music Intervention on Functional Connectivity Strength of the Brain in Schizophrenia

Mi Yang; Hui He; Mingjun Duan; Xi Chen; Xin Chang; Yongxiu Lai; Jianfu Li; Tiejun Liu; Cheng Luo; Dezhong Yao

Schizophrenia is often associated with behavior abnormality in the cognitive and affective domain. Music intervention is used as a complementary treatment for improving symptoms in patients with schizophrenia. However, the neurophysiological correlates of these remissions remain poorly understood. Here, we investigated the effects of music intervention in neural circuits through functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study in schizophrenic subjects. Under the standard care, patients were randomly assigned to music and non-music interventions (MTSZ, UMTSZ) for 1 month. Resting-state fMRI were acquired over three time points (baseline, 1 month, and 6 months later) in patients and analyzed using functional connectivity strength (FCS) and seed-based functional connection (FC) approaches. At baseline, compared with healthy controls, decreased FCS in the right middle temporal gyrus (MTG) was observed in patients. However, after music intervention, the functional circuitry of the right MTG, which was related with the function of emotion and sensorimotor, was improved in MTSZ. Furthermore, the FC increments were significantly correlated with the improvement of symptoms, while vanishing 6 months later. Together, these findings provided evidence that music intervention might positively modulate the functional connectivity of MTG in patients with schizophrenia; such changes might be associated with the observed therapeutic effects of music intervention on neurocognitive function. This trial is registered with ChiCTR-OPC-14005339.


Neural Plasticity | 2018

Functional Connectivity Alterations in Children with Spastic and Dyskinetic Cerebral Palsy

Yun Qin; Yanan Li; Bo Sun; Hui He; Rui Peng; Tao Zhang; Jianfu Li; Cheng Luo; Chengyan Sun; Dezhong Yao

Cerebral palsy (CP) has long been investigated to be associated with a range of motor and cognitive dysfunction. As the two most common CP subtypes, spastic cerebral palsy (SCP) and dyskinetic cerebral palsy (DCP) may share common and distinct elements in their pathophysiology. However, the common and distinct dysfunctional characteristics between SCP and DCP on the brain network level are less known. This study aims to detect the alteration of brain functional connectivity in children with SCP and DCP based on resting-state functional MRI (fMRI). Resting-state networks (RSNs) were established based on the independent component analysis (ICA), and the functional network connectivity (FNC) was performed on the fMRI data from 16 DCP, 18 bilateral SCP, and 18 healthy children. Compared with healthy controls, altered functional connectivity within the cerebellum network, sensorimotor network (SMN), left frontoparietal network (LFPN), and salience network (SN) were found in DCP and SCP groups. Furthermore, the disconnections of the FNC consistently focused on the visual pathway; covariance of the default mode network (DMN) with other networks was observed both in DCP and SCP groups, while the DCP group had a distinct connectivity abnormality in motor pathway and self-referential processing-related connections. Correlations between the functional disconnection and the motor-related clinical measurement in children with CP were also found. These findings indicate functional connectivity impairment and altered integration widely exist in children with CP, suggesting that the abnormal functional connectivity is a pathophysiological mechanism of motor and cognitive dysfunction of CP.

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Cheng Luo

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Dezhong Yao

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Hui He

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Li Dong

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Diankun Gong

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Jinnan Gong

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Yongxiu Lai

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Dan Zhang

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Mingjun Duan

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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Sisi Jiang

University of Electronic Science and Technology of China

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