Extended Data Fig. 3: Functional connectivity differences reveal subgroup-specific atypical connectivity.
From: Molecular and network-level mechanisms explaining individual differences in autism spectrum disorder

Subgroups were defined as the modal subgroup assignment over the 1,000 training set replicates, which is used in the main text for Figs. 3–6. (a-d) Heatmaps show patterns of atypical connectivity in each subgroup across brain regions (rows) and functional networks (columns). Thresholded for significant atypical connectivity (two-sided Welch’s t-test, FDR < 0.05), evaluated in N = 69 ASD subjects in subgroup 1, N = 87 ASD subjects in subgroup 2, N = 67 ASD subjects in subgroup 3, N = 76 ASD subjects in subgroup 4, relative to N = 907 neurotypical controls.