Title of article :
Within-Subject Reproducibility of Visual Activation Patterns With Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Using Multislice Echo Planar Imaging
Author/Authors :
Rombouts، نويسنده , , Serge A.R.B. and Barkhof، نويسنده , , Frederik and Hoogenraad، نويسنده , , Frank G.C. and Sprenger، نويسنده , , Michiel and Scheltens، نويسنده , , Philip، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
9
From page :
105
To page :
113
Abstract :
Within-subject reproducibility of visual brain activation using multislice echo planar functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was tested. Ten healthy subjects underwent fMRI with visual stimulation on three occasions: two studies in one scanning session (without repositioning); and a third study 1 h to 2 weeks later. Following a three-dimensional matching procedure, activation was measured and compared between sessions on a voxel-by-voxel basis. Data were filtered to full-width-at-half-maximum of 4.0 × 4.0 × 5.0 mm and a conservative Bonferroni-corrected significance threshold was applied to correlation maps. For reproducibility, change in centre of mass of the activated volume, a ratio of the number of pixels and a ratio of the number of overlapping pixels was calculated. Further, reproducibility was tested varying significance thresholds and at different filter widths. Average changes in centre of mass of the activated volume were 2.63 and 3.96 mm between Studies 1 and 2 and 1 and 3, respectively. The reproducibility of the number of activated voxels was 90% and 88% (Studies 1 and 2 and 1 and 3). The ratio of overlapping pixels was 74% between Studies 1 and 2 and 64% between Studies 1 and 3. Varying the significance threshold showed that at a certain range, the overlap reached a maximum, and increasing the filter widths increased reproducibility. It is concluded that fMRI with visual stimulation can be used to measure brain activity with reasonably good reproducibility on a routine clinical system equipped with echo planar imaging. Difficulties remain in separating the contribution of motion, repositioning errors, and true physiological changes.
Keywords :
Reproducibility , Functional magnetic resonance imaging , Human brain , Visual Cortex
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Record number :
1829621
Link To Document :
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