Title
A multivariate approach for processing magnetization effects in triggered event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging time series.
Abstract
Triggered event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging requires sparse intervals of temporally resolved functional data acquisitions, whose initiation corresponds to the occurrence of an event, typically an epileptic spike in the electroencephalographic trace. However, conventional fMRI time series are greatly affected by non-steady-state magnetization effects, which obscure initial blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals. Here, conventional echo-planar imaging and a post-processing solution based on principal component analysis were employed to remove the dominant eigenimages of the time series, to filter out the global signal changes induced by magnetization decay and to recover BOLD signals starting with the first functional volume. This approach was compared with a physical solution using radiofrequency preparation, which nullifies magnetization effects. As an application of the method, the detectability of the initial transient BOLD response in the auditory cortex, which is elicited by the onset of acoustic scanner noise, was used to demonstrate that post-processing-based removal of magnetization effects allows to detect brain activity patterns identical with those obtained using the radiofrequency preparation. Using the auditory responses as an ideal experimental model of triggered brain activity, our results suggest that reducing the initial magnetization effects by removing a few principal components from fMRI data may be potentially useful in the analysis of triggered event-related echo-planar time series. The implications of this study are discussed with special caution to remaining technical limitations and the additional neurophysiological issues of the triggered acquisition.
Year
DOI
Venue
2006
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2005.09.012
NeuroImage
Keywords
Field
DocType
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI),Triggered event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging,Multivariate filter,Eigenfilter,Principal and independent component analysis (PCA, ICA),Auditory cortex
Auditory cortex,Neurophysiology,Functional magnetic resonance imaging,Multivariate statistics,Magnetization,Cognitive psychology,Psychology,Brain activity and meditation,Speech recognition,Nuclear magnetic resonance,Principal component analysis,Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging
Journal
Volume
Issue
ISSN
30
1
1053-8119
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.47
3
Authors
8
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
Fabrizio Esposito142136.61
Francesco Di Salle215516.25
Franciszek Hennel320.81
Ornella Santopaolo420.47
M HERDENER5355.00
Klaus Scheffler612419.24
rainer goebel747640.13
E SEIFRITZ818617.42