The relationship between the structural connectome and functional activity in the brain is highly complex, and understanding of the connection between the two is limited. Previous work has shown a marginal reliance of functional brain activity on underlying structural connections, indicating significant flexibility of neural communication. Here, we introduce a new method to quantify structure-function coupling and compare it with a standard coupling technique by evaluating the structure-function relationship across numerous fMRI task paradigms. Through this comparison, we investigate how structure-function relationships change during different cognitive demands and we evaluate how they relate to behavior. The new method introduced here, structural reliance, exhibits different structure-function correspondence patterns throughout the brain, and it generally outperforms the standard coupling measure in coupling-based behavioral measure predictions.
Madden et al. (Thu,) studied this question.