Default mode network

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The regions of the DMN visualized by fMRI .

As default mode network ( English , DMN, dt. Hibernation Network ) refers to a group of brain regions that when nothing is active and deactivated when solving tasks. The resting activity of these brain regions can be demonstrated with fMRI (especially Resting state fMRI ), PET , EEG and MEG .

The activity of these brain regions is correlated . Therefore this group of synchronously active brain regions is seen as a network . The network can be described with the mathematical tool graph theory . The brain regions involved include the medial prefrontal cortex , praecuneus , parts of the cingulate gyrus and - more weakly connected - the superior parietal lobule of the parietal lobe and the hippocampus .

The DMN becomes active (more) when a person is daydreaming , making plans for the future, etc. It enables so-called stimulus-independent thinking .

It could be shown that the anatomical and functional connectivity of the brain overlaps the most in the area of ​​the default mode network . This was interpreted in such a way that the anatomical structure of the brain favors an activation of the network in states in which there is no task-specific requirement (in rest states).

discovery

The Default Mode Network was discovered in 2001 when neuroscientists compared the activated areas of the brain in a supposedly resting state with closed eyes or calmly fixed on a point with those that were activated while solving specific tasks. They found areas that were more active at rest than at concentration. After ruling out misrepresentations, they realized that the brain is exhibiting background activity that predominates when at rest but shuts down when focusing on specific functions.

Clinical relevance

Changes in the DMN have been found in some neurological and psychiatric diseases (including Alzheimer's disease , depression and schizophrenia ).

literature

Web links

Videos

Individual evidence

  1. A. Horn, D. Ostwald, M. Reisert, F. Blankenburg: The structural-functional connectome and the default mode network of the human brain . In: NeuroImage . 2013. doi : 10.1016 / j.neuroimage.2013.09.069 .
  2. ^ Marcus E. Raichle et al .: A default mode of brain function . In: PNAS, vol. 98 no. 2 (January 16, 2001), pp. 676-682