About this Research Topic
The detailed understanding of the brain is one of the main frontiers in modern science. Neuroscience offers an exceptional opportunity for interdisciplinary research where biology, physics, mathematics, statistics, engineering, and other fields of science come together to advance our knowledge on the structure and function of the brain and its many connected networks. Investigations of the brain take place on multiple scales, including macroscale at the level of brain regions, mesoescale at the level of neuronal populations, and microscale at the level of single neurons and neuron-neuron interactions. Integration over these scales requires novel techniques. New and developing technique such as optogenetics, structural and functional magnetic resonance connectivity frameworks, high field MRI (7T and above), in-vivo optical imaging, and causal models of functional data are already having a big impact.
This Frontiers Research Topic attempts to advance this area across a broad front by soliciting submissions on novel experimental and computational techniques devoted to the study of brain networks. Specific topics of interest include but not limited to: novel imaging techniques, innovative statistical techniques, multiple imaging modality integration, new hardware developments, and unique graph theoretical frameworks (i.e. complex network analysis).
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.