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      TRIPLE REPRESENTATION OF LANGUAGE, WORKING MEMORY, SOCIAL AND EMOTION PROCESSING IN THE CEREBELLUM: CONVERGENT EVIDENCE FROM TASK AND SEED-BASED RESTING-STATE FMRI ANALYSES IN A SINGLE LARGE COHORT

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          Abstract

          Delineation of functional topography is critical to the evolving understanding of the cerebellum’s role in a wide range of nervous system functions. We used data from the Human Connectome Project (n=787) to analyze cerebellar fMRI task activation (motor, working memory, language, social and emotion processing) and resting-state functional connectivity calculated from cerebral cortical seeds corresponding to the peak Cohen’s d of each task contrast. The combination of exceptional statistical power, activation from both motor and multiple non-motor tasks in the same participants, and convergent resting-state networks in the same participants revealed novel aspects of the functional topography of the human cerebellum. Consistent with prior studies there were two distinct representations of motor activation. Newly revealed were three distinct representations each for working memory, language, social, and emotional task processing that were largely separate for these four cognitive and affective domains. In most cases, the task-based activations and the corresponding resting-network correlations were congruent in identifying the two motor representations and the three non-motor representations that were unique to working memory, language, social cognition, and emotion. The definitive localization and characterization of distinct triple representations for cognition and emotion task processing in the cerebellum opens up new basic science questions as to why there are triple representations (what different functions are enabled by the different representations?) and new clinical questions (what are the differing consequences of lesions to the different representations?).

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9215515
          20498
          Neuroimage
          Neuroimage
          NeuroImage
          1053-8119
          1095-9572
          26 February 2018
          02 February 2018
          15 May 2018
          15 May 2019
          : 172
          : 437-449
          Affiliations
          [a ]Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences and McGovern Institute for Brain Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge MA 02139, USA
          [b ]Cognitive Neuroscience Research Unit (URNC), Department of Psychiatric and Forensic Medicine, Universitat Autonoma de Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
          [c ]Laboratory for Neuroanatomy and Cerebellar Neurobiology, Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston MA 02114, USA
          [d ]Ataxia Unit, Cognitive Behavioral Neurology Unit, Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston MA 02114, USA
          Author notes
          Correspondence to: Jeremy Schmahmann, MD Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital 100 Cambridge Street, Suite 2000 Boston, MA 02114, USA, jschmahmann@ 123456mgh.harvard.edu Tel: (617) 726-3216
          Article
          PMC5910233 PMC5910233 5910233 nihpa941643
          10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.01.082
          5910233
          29408539
          7696f687-ce65-4ad9-b3fb-5a38acde345b
          History
          Categories
          Article

          resting state fMRI,cerebellar topography,cognition,task-based fMRI,sensorimotor

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