Laia Barjuan i Ballabriga
Institute of Complex Systems of the University of Barcelona
Fri
,
Jul 24, 2026
6:00 am
EST
Jul 24, 2026
6:00 am
In-person
One Portsoken
714
Portsoken Street
London, E1 8PH, UK
London, E1 8PH, UK
The Roux Institute
Room
714
100 Fore Street
Portland, ME 04101
Portland, ME 04101
Network Science Institute
2nd floor
2nd floor
Network Science Institute
11th floor
11th floor
177 Huntington Ave
Boston, MA 02115
Boston, MA 02115
Network Science Institute
2nd floor
2nd floor
Talk recording
Anatomical connectivity between different brain regions can be mapped to a network representation, the connectome, where the intensities of the links, the weights, influence resilience and functional processes. Yet, many features associated with these weights are not fully understood, particularly their multiscale organization. In this paper, we elucidate the architecture of weights, including weak ties, in multiscale human brain connectomes reconstructed from empirical data. Our findings reveal multiscale self-similarity, including the ordering of weak ties, in every individual connectome and group representative. This phenomenon is captured by a renormalization technique based on a geometric network model that replicates the observed structure of connectomes across all length scales, using the same connectivity law and weighting function for both weak and strong ties. The observed symmetry represents a signature of criticality in the weighted connectivity of the human brain and raises important questions for future research, such as the existence of symmetry breaking at some scale or whether it is preserved in cases of neurodegeneration or psychiatric disorder.
About the speaker
I am a PhD student at the Institute of Complex Systems of the University of Barcelona (UBICS). I hold a BSc in fundamental physics from the University of Barcelona and an MSc in computational modeling through a collaborative program between the University of Barcelona and the Polytechnic University of Catalonia. My research lies in the field of network neuroscience, where I study the principles governing brain connectivity across different scales and how brain architecture influences function.
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