open-connectome-classes / StatConn-Spring-2015-Info

introductory material
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combing two graphs? #10

Closed kittyzxu closed 9 years ago

kittyzxu commented 9 years ago

Have people done the type of work where they 1) create one graph that connects different parts of the human brain based on its anatomical and structural features and connections; 2) create a second graph that's based on the functional connectives among the regions of the brain; 3) sum the two graphs together; 4) What would they get as a result and how would the combined two graphs inform about our brain?

jovo commented 9 years ago

yup. @gkiar - can you put a couple papers in the google drive that compare functional and structural connectomes? lemme know if you don't find any.

@kittzxu - they don't tend to add them, rather, compare them. for now. we have a draft paper on this, that i hope will go on the arxiv soon, when it does, i'll share...

On Fri Jan 30 2015 at 11:46:00 AM kittyzxu notifications@github.com wrote:

Have people done the type of work where they 1) create one graph that connects different parts of the human brain based its anatomical and structural features and connections; 2) create a second graph that's based on the functional connectives among the regions of the brain; 3) sum the two graphs together; 4) What would they get as a result and how would the combined two graphs inform about our brain?

— Reply to this email directly or view it on GitHub https://github.com/Statistical-Connectomics-Sp15/intro/issues/10.

kittyzxu commented 9 years ago

Thank you for the answer!

gkiar commented 9 years ago

Getting access to the google drive, but try this article: http://www.nature.com/nrn/journal/v10/n3/pdf/nrn2575.pdf