TY - JOUR
T1 - The importance of the whole
T2 - Topological data analysis for the network neuroscientist
AU - Sizemore, Ann E.
AU - Phillips-Cremins, Jennifer E.
AU - Ghrist, Robert
AU - Bassett, Danielle S.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
PY - 2019/1/1
Y1 - 2019/1/1
N2 - Data analysis techniques from network science have fundamentally improved our understanding of neural systems and the complex behaviors that they support. Yet the restriction of network techniques to the study of pairwise interactions prevents us from taking into account intrinsic topological features such as cavities that may be crucial for system function. To detect and quantify these topological features, we must turn to algebro-topological methods that encode data as a simplicial complex built from sets of interacting nodes called simplices. We then use the relations between simplices to expose cavities within the complex, thereby summarizing its topological features. Here we provide an introduction to persistent homology, a fundamental method from applied topology that builds a global descriptor of system structure by chronicling the evolution of cavities as we move through a combinatorial object such as a weighted network. We detail the mathematics and perform demonstrative calculations on the mouse structural connectome, synapses in C. elegans, and genomic interaction data. Finally, we suggest avenues for future work and highlight new advances in mathematics ready for use in neural systems.
AB - Data analysis techniques from network science have fundamentally improved our understanding of neural systems and the complex behaviors that they support. Yet the restriction of network techniques to the study of pairwise interactions prevents us from taking into account intrinsic topological features such as cavities that may be crucial for system function. To detect and quantify these topological features, we must turn to algebro-topological methods that encode data as a simplicial complex built from sets of interacting nodes called simplices. We then use the relations between simplices to expose cavities within the complex, thereby summarizing its topological features. Here we provide an introduction to persistent homology, a fundamental method from applied topology that builds a global descriptor of system structure by chronicling the evolution of cavities as we move through a combinatorial object such as a weighted network. We detail the mathematics and perform demonstrative calculations on the mouse structural connectome, synapses in C. elegans, and genomic interaction data. Finally, we suggest avenues for future work and highlight new advances in mathematics ready for use in neural systems.
KW - Applied topology
KW - Persistent homology
KW - Topological data analysis
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85071489123
U2 - 10.1162/netn_a_00073
DO - 10.1162/netn_a_00073
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85071489123
SN - 2472-1751
VL - 3
SP - 656
EP - 673
JO - Network Neuroscience
JF - Network Neuroscience
IS - 3
ER -