Scientists at the Yale School of Public Health (YSPH) have developed a process that could lead to a better understanding of how brain function is connected to behavior.
In a study published in Nature Methods, the researchers introduce LatentSNA, a novel analytical method which helps scientists find clearer links between patterns in the brain and things like emotions, thinking, and mental health.
Brain scans, such as MRI, produce very complex data, but they tend to isolate brain performance and miss larger brain networks acting in unison. The LatentSNA approach looks at the brain as a whole system, identifying broader patterns and allowing researchers to capture how different regions work together.
Using data from thousands of people across multiple large studies, the researchers found that their method was much more accurate than existing tools. In some cases, it improved the ability to detect meaningful brain–behavior links by more than 100% and made results more consistent across studies.
The method also revealed new insights into mental health. For example, in children, the researchers found that emotional problems like anxiety and depression are linked to disruptions across many parts of the brain, not just one area. These disruptions often form “hub-and-spoke” patterns, where a few key brain regions play a central role in communication.