Introduction
One of the goals in human brain mapping is to relate brain areas to psychological
functions. Meta-analyses can confirm presumed links and further suggest new
directions for hypothesis-testing research [1]. The mounting functional imaging
literature calls for new innovative computer assisted meta-analysis schemes.
Here we describe a semi-automated data mining method combining text analysis
of PubMed abstracts and analysis of the spatial distribution of Talairach
activation foci. The method is applied to extract main functions associated
with the posterior cingulate and describe their spatial distribution within
this area.
Method
We queried PubMed for articles about posterior cingulate including the retrosplenial
area and further restricting the query to functional neuroimaging. The articles
retrieved by the query were downloaded and converted to a vectorial bag-of-words
representation by counting the number of occurrences of each word in each
article. An extensive stop word list was applied to focus on words pertaining
to brain function. The set of abstracts were represented in an abstract-times-words
matrix and this matrix was subjected to non-negative matrix factorization
(NMF) [2]. The number of components in the NMF was varied between K=1-12.
Talairach coordinates were extracted from articles that had a high load on
the NMF components and grouped according to their component. Multivariate
statistical tests were performed to investigate whether the centroids of the
sets of Talairach coordinates overlapped.
Results
The text analysis with NMF showed that the most dominating theme related
to the posterior cingulate was memory: "memory", "retrieval", and "episodic"
were the words that had the highest load on the component and, e.g., an article
with the title Remembering the past: two facets of episodic memory explored
with positron emission tomography was found to be a prototypical article
for this component. "Alzheimer" ('s disease) was found as another prominent
theme (figure 1). As the number of NMF components increased these two themes
would typically be modeled with several components. Pain and emotion were
also found as major themes. Spatial analysis of extracted Talairach coordinates
revealed that memory and pain showed a difference in focus (Figure 2; Hotelling's
T2 test: P=0.0022; permutation test: P=0.002)
where the memory coordinates showed an affinity toward the caudal aspect of
posterior cingulate while pain was mostly confined to the rostral part.
Discussion
The finding that episodic memory retrieval and Alzheimer's disease were
highly associated with posterior cingulate is in accordance with "manual"
reviews [1, 3]. The involvement of the posterior cingulate cortex in pain
was unexpected (e.g.[4]). Our analysis of the spatial distribution of Talairach
coordinates showed functional heterogeneity along the rostrocaudal axis.
This is "orthogonal" to the ventrodorsal cytoarchictonic division [5].
References
[1] Cabeza R, Nyberg L, J. Cogn. Neurosci., 2000, 12:1-47
[2] Lee DD, Seung HS, Nature, 1999, 401:788-791.
[3] Matsuda H, Ann. Nucl. Med., 2001, 15:85-92.
[4] Peyron R, Laurent B, Garcia-Larrea L, Neurophysiol. Clin., 2000, 5:263-288.
[5] Vogt BA, Vogt LJ., Perl DP, J. Comp. Neurol., 2001, 438:353-376.
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