4 research outputs found

    Harmonization of multi-site functional MRI data with dual-projection based ICA model

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    Modern neuroimaging studies frequently merge magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data from multiple sites. A larger and more diverse group of participants can increase the statistical power, enhance the reliability and reproducibility of neuroimaging research, and obtain findings more representative of the general population. However, measurement biases caused by site differences in scanners represent a barrier when pooling data collected from different sites. The existence of site effects can mask biological effects and lead to spurious findings. We recently proposed a powerful denoising strategy that implements dual-projection (DP) theory based on ICA to remove site-related effects from pooled data, demonstrating the method for simulated and in vivo structural MRI data. This study investigates the use of our DP-based ICA denoising method for harmonizing functional MRI (fMRI) data collected from the Autism Brain Imaging Data Exchange II. After frequency-domain and regional homogeneity analyses, two modalities, including amplitude of low frequency fluctuation (ALFF) and regional homogeneity (ReHo), were used to validate our method. The results indicate that DP-based ICA denoising method removes unwanted site effects for both two fMRI modalities, with increases in the significance of the associations between non-imaging variables (age, sex, etc.) and fMRI measures. In conclusion, our DP method can be applied to fMRI data in multi-site studies, enabling more accurate and reliable neuroimaging research findings

    Evaluation of consciousness rehabilitation via neuroimaging methods

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    Accurate evaluation of patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC) is crucial for personalized treatment. However, misdiagnosis remains a serious issue. Neuroimaging methods could observe the conscious activity in patients who have no evidence of consciousness in behavior, and provide objective and quantitative indexes to assist doctors in their diagnosis. In the review, we discussed the current research based on the evaluation of consciousness rehabilitation after DoC using EEG, fMRI, PET, and fNIRS, as well as the advantages and limitations of each method. Nowadays single-modal neuroimaging can no longer meet the researchers` demand. Considering both spatial and temporal resolution, recent studies have attempted to focus on the multi-modal method which can enhance the capability of neuroimaging methods in the evaluation of DoC. As neuroimaging devices become wireless, integrated, and portable, multi-modal neuroimaging methods will drive new advancements in brain science research

    Denoising scanner effects from multimodal MRI data using linked independent component analysis

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    Pooling magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data across research studies, or utilizing shared data from imaging repositories, presents exceptional opportunities to advance and enhance reproducibility of neuroscience research. However, scanner confounds hinder pooling data collected on different scanners or across software and hardware upgrades on the same scanner, even when all acquisition protocols are harmonized. These confounds reduce power and can lead to spurious findings. Unfortunately, methods to address this problem are scant. In this study, we propose a novel denoising approach that implements a data-driven linked independent component analysis (LICA) to identify scanner-related effects for removal from multimodal MRI to denoise scanner effects. We utilized multi-study data to test our proposed method that were collected on a single 3T scanner, pre- and post-software and major hardware upgrades and using different acquisition parameters. Our proposed denoising method shows a greater reduction of scanner-related variance compared with standard GLM confound regression or ICA-based single-modality denoising. Although we did not test it here, for combining data across different scanners, LICA should prove even better at identifying scanner effects as between-scanner variability is generally much larger than within-scanner variability. Our method has great promise for denoising scanner effects in multi-study and in large-scale multi-site studies that may be confounded by scanner differences
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