Fig. 1: Functional connectivity gradients of the cerebellum and the hippocampus in relation to the isocortex in humans (n = 1003). | Communications Biology

Fig. 1: Functional connectivity gradients of the cerebellum and the hippocampus in relation to the isocortex in humans (n = 1003).

From: Correspondence of functional connectivity gradients across human isocortex, cerebellum, and hippocampus

Fig. 1

a The scree plot illustrates the proportion of variance explained by each of the ten functional connectivity gradients derived from intrinsic connectivity between the cerebellum and the isocortex. The flatmap as a reference of the cerebellar lobules was reproduced from ref. 38 with permission. b The three most dominant gradients of cerebellar-isocortical connectivity. c The scree plot illustrates the proportion of variance explained by each of the ten functional connectivity gradients derived from the intrinsic connectivity between the isocortex and the hippocampus (top). A figure illustrating the subfields in the right hippocampus (red = CA1–3, blue = CA4-DG, green = subiculum) was reproduced from ref. 58 with permission. d The three most dominant gradients of the hippocampal-isocortical connectivity. e The ridge plot depicts the distribution of gradient values per hippocampal subfield group.

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