496 research outputs found

    Parametric study of EEG sensitivity to phase noise during face processing

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    <b>Background: </b> The present paper examines the visual processing speed of complex objects, here faces, by mapping the relationship between object physical properties and single-trial brain responses. Measuring visual processing speed is challenging because uncontrolled physical differences that co-vary with object categories might affect brain measurements, thus biasing our speed estimates. Recently, we demonstrated that early event-related potential (ERP) differences between faces and objects are preserved even when images differ only in phase information, and amplitude spectra are equated across image categories. Here, we use a parametric design to study how early ERP to faces are shaped by phase information. Subjects performed a two-alternative force choice discrimination between two faces (Experiment 1) or textures (two control experiments). All stimuli had the same amplitude spectrum and were presented at 11 phase noise levels, varying from 0% to 100% in 10% increments, using a linear phase interpolation technique. Single-trial ERP data from each subject were analysed using a multiple linear regression model. <b>Results: </b> Our results show that sensitivity to phase noise in faces emerges progressively in a short time window between the P1 and the N170 ERP visual components. The sensitivity to phase noise starts at about 120–130 ms after stimulus onset and continues for another 25–40 ms. This result was robust both within and across subjects. A control experiment using pink noise textures, which had the same second-order statistics as the faces used in Experiment 1, demonstrated that the sensitivity to phase noise observed for faces cannot be explained by the presence of global image structure alone. A second control experiment used wavelet textures that were matched to the face stimuli in terms of second- and higher-order image statistics. Results from this experiment suggest that higher-order statistics of faces are necessary but not sufficient to obtain the sensitivity to phase noise function observed in response to faces. <b>Conclusion: </b> Our results constitute the first quantitative assessment of the time course of phase information processing by the human visual brain. We interpret our results in a framework that focuses on image statistics and single-trial analyses

    A Mixed Model Approach for Estimating Regional Functional Connectivity from Voxel-level BOLD Signals

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    Resting state brain functional connectivity quantifies the similarity between brain regions, each of which consists of voxels at which dynamic signals are acquired via neuroimaging techniques such as blood-oxygen-level-dependent signals in functional magnetic resonance imaging. Pearson correlation and similar metrics have been adopted by neuroscientists to estimate inter-regional connectivity, usually after averaging of signals within regions. However, dependencies between signals within each region and the presence of noise could contaminate such inter-regional correlation estimates. We propose a mixed-effects model with a novel covariance structure that explicitly isolates the different sources of variability in the observed BOLD signals, including correlated regional signals, local spatiotemporal variability, and measurement error. Methods for tackling the computational challenges associated with restricted maximum likelihood estimation will be discussed. Large sample properties are discussed and used for uncertainty quantification. Simulation results demonstrate that the parameters of the proposed model parameters can be accurately estimated and is superior to the Pearson correlation of averages in the presence of spatiotemporal noise. The proposed model is also applied to a real data set of BOLD signals collected from rats to construct individual brain networks.Comment: 25 pages, 6 figure

    Determining Significant Connectivity by 4D Spatiotemporal Wavelet Packet Resampling of Functional Neuroimaging Data

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    An active area of neuroimaging research involves examining functional relationships between spatially remote brain regions. When determining whether two brain regions exhibit significant correlation due to true functional connectivity, one must account for the background spatial correlation inherent in neuroimaging data. We define background correlation as spatiotemporal correlation in the data caused by factors other than neurophysiologically based functional associations such as scanner induced correlations and image preprocessing. We develop a 4D spatiotemporal wavelet packet resampling method which generates surrogate data that preserves only the average background spatial correlation within an axial slice, across axial slices, and through each voxel time series, while excluding the specific correlations due to true functional relationships. We also extend an amplitude adjustment algorithm which adjusts our surrogate data to closely match the amplitude distribution of the original data. Our method improves upon existing wavelet-based methods and extends them to 4D. We apply our resampling technique to determine significant functional connectivity from resting state and motor task fMRI datasets

    Spatiotemporal brain imaging and modeling

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    Thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard-MIT Division of Health Sciences and Technology, February 2004.Includes bibliographical references.This thesis integrates hardware development, data analysis, and mathematical modeling to facilitate our understanding of brain cognition. Exploration of these brain mechanisms requires both structural and functional knowledge to (i) reconstruct the spatial distribution of the activity, (ii) to estimate when these areas are activated and what is the temporal sequence of activations, and (iii)to determine how the information flows in the large-scale neural network during the execution of cognitive and/or behavioral tasks. Advanced noninvasive medical imaging modalities are able to locate brain activities at high spatial and temporal resolutions. Quantitative modeling of these data is needed to understand how large-scale distributed neuronal interactions underlying perceptual, cognitive, and behavioral functions emerge and change over time. This thesis explores hardware enhancement and novel analytical approaches to improve the spatiotemporal resolution of single (MRI) or combined (MRI/fMRI and MEG/EEG) imaging modalities. In addition, mathematical approaches for identifying large-scale neural networks and their correlation to behavioral measurements are investigated. Part I of the thesis investigates parallel MRI. New hardware and image reconstruction techniques are introduced to improve spatiotemporal resolution and to reduce image distortion in structural and functional MRI. Part II discusses the localization of MEG/EEG signals on the cortical surface using anatomical information from AMTRI, and takes advantage of the high temporal resolution of MEG/EEG measurements to study cortical oscillations in the human auditory system. Part III introduces a multivariate modeling technique to identify "nodes" and "connectivity" in a(cont.) large-scale neural network and its correlation to behavior measurements in the human motor system.by Fa-Hsuan Lin.Ph.D

    Bayesian analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging data with spatially varying auto‐regressive orders

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    Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/148250/1/rssc12320.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/148250/2/rssc12320_am.pd

    Explicit processing of verbal and spatial features during letter-location binding modulates oscillatory activity of a fronto-parietal network.

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    The present study investigated the binding of verbal and spatial features in immediate memory. In a recent study, we demonstrated incidental and asymmetrical letter-location binding effects when participants attended to letter features (but not when they attended to location features) that were associated with greater oscillatory activity over prefrontal and posterior regions during the retention period. We were interested to investigate whether the patterns of brain activity associated with the incidental binding of letters and locations observed when only the verbal feature is attended differ from those reflecting the binding resulting from the controlled/explicit processing of both verbal and spatial features. To achieve this, neural activity was recorded using magnetoencephalography (MEG) while participants performed two working memory tasks. Both tasks were identical in terms of their perceptual characteristics and only differed with respect to the task instructions. One of the tasks required participants to process both letters and locations. In the other, participants were instructed to memorize only the letters, regardless of their location. Time–frequency representation of MEG data based on the wavelet transform of the signals was calculated on a single trial basis during the maintenance period of both tasks. Critically, despite equivalent behavioural binding effects in both tasks, single and dual feature encoding relied on different neuroanatomical and neural oscillatory correlates. We propose that enhanced activation of an anterior–posterior dorsal network observed in the task requiring the processing of both features reflects the necessity for allocating greater resources to intentionally process verbal and spatial features in this task
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