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. 2019 May 1;15(5):e1006934. doi: 10.1371/journal.pcbi.1006934

Fig 5. The community structure of the SCN for 4 different samples (A,B,C,D) as resolved by our method (top) and by the Rubinov and Sporns [14] approach.

Fig 5

The panels represents the partitions detected, where each community is marked with a different colour. We can see that the Rubinov Sporns method shares a good resemblance to the clear core periphery structure that is detected by our method. In contrast to the random matrix approach, the signed Leuven consistently detects a third module, in a different location at each time.