Title :
Structural Analysis of fMRI Data Revisited: Improving the Sensitivity and Reliability of fMRI Group Studies
Author :
Thirion, Bertrand ; Pinel, Philippe ; Tucholka, Alan ; Roche, Alexis ; Ciuciu, Philippe ; Mangin, Jean-François ; Poline, Jean-Baptiste
Author_Institution :
Pare Club Orsay Univ. ZAC des Vignes, Orsay
Abstract :
Group studies of functional magnetic resonance imaging datasets are usually based on the computation of the mean signal across subjects at each voxel (random effects analyses), assuming that all subjects have been set in the same anatomical space (normalization). Although this approach allows for a correct specificity (rate of false detections), it is not very efficient for three reasons: i) its underlying hypotheses, perfect coregistration of the individual datasets and normality of the measured signal at the group level are frequently violated; ii) the group size is small in general, so that asymptotic approximations on the parameters distributions do not hold; iii) the large size of the images requires some conservative strategies to control the false detection rate, at the risk of increasing the number of false negatives. Given that it is still very challenging to build generative or parametric models of intersubject variability, we rely on a rule based, bottom-up approach: we present a set of procedures that detect structures of interest from each subject´s data, then search for correspondences across subjects and outline the most reproducible activation regions in the group studied. This framework enables a strict control on the number of false detections. It is shown here that this analysis demonstrates increased validity and improves both the sensitivity and reliability of group analyses compared with standard methods. Moreover, it directly provides information on the spatial position correspondence or variability of the activated regions across subjects, which is difficult to obtain in standard voxel-based analyses.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; neurophysiology; fMRI data structural analysis; fMRI group study reliability; fMRI group study sensitivity; false detection rate; functional magnetic resonance imaging datasets; normalization; random effect analysis; rule based bottom-up approach; spatial position correspondence; spatial position variability; Data analysis; Image analysis; Information analysis; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neuroimaging; Parametric statistics; Signal analysis; Size control; Size measurement; Belief propagation (BP); functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI); group analysis; group comparison; replicator dynamics (RD); spatial normalization; structural methods; watershed; Algorithms; Artificial Intelligence; Brain; Brain Mapping; Evoked Potentials; Humans; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Information Storage and Retrieval; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Subtraction Technique;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2007.903226