scholarly journals Improved motion correction of submillimetre 7T fMRI time series with boundary-based registration (BBR)

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pei Huang ◽  
Johan D. Carlin ◽  
Richard N. Henson ◽  
Marta M. Correia

AbstractUltra-high field functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has allowed us to acquire images with submillimetre voxels. However, in order to interpret the data clearly, we need to accurately correct head motion and the resultant distortions. Here, we present a novel application of Boundary Based Registration (BBR) to realign functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) data and evaluate its effectiveness on a set of 7T submillimetre data, as well as millimetre 3T data for comparison. BBR utilizes the boundary information from high contrast present in structural data to drive registration of functional data to the structural data. In our application, we realign each functional volume individually to the structural data, effectively realigning them to each other. In addition, this realignment method removes the need for a secondary aligning of functional data to structural data for purposes such as laminar segmentation or registration to data from other scanners. We demonstrate that BBR realignment outperforms standard realignment methods across a variety of data analysis methods. Further analysis shows that this benefit is an inherent property of the BBR cost function and not due to the difference in target volume. Our results show that BBR realignment is able to accurately correct head motion in 7T data and can be utilized in preprocessing pipelines to improve the quality of 7T data.

1997 ◽  
Vol 77 (5) ◽  
pp. 2780-2787 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ravi S. Menon ◽  
Seiji Ogawa ◽  
John P. Strupp ◽  
Kâmil Uǧurbil

Menon, Ravi S., Seiji Ogawa, John P. Strupp, and Kâmil Uǧurbil. Ocular dominance in human V1 demonstrated by functional magnetic resonance imaging. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 2780–2787, 1997. Very high resolution functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) at a 4 Tesla (T) magnetic field was used to map ocular dominance regions in the human visual cortical layers using the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) contrast mechanism. The fMRI response from primary visual cortex (V1) exhibited a distribution of ocular dominance reminiscent of the single-cell recordings of Hubel and Wiesel. Pixels could be grouped into seven categories varying from left-only response to binocular-only response to right-only responses. Nonspecific responses were found in the MRI-visible draining veins as well as in the parenchyma. Although large vessel BOLD signals are easily detectable, regardless of field strength, they demonstrate a fMRI response to photic input that could not be used to distinguish ocular dominance. The difference in BOLD response between a region activated by one eye and that activated by the other is only 2.9% on average. This necessitates the use of a difference paradigm to visualize the regions of ocular dominance accurately. The data show that BOLD-based fMRI is sensitive to neuronal activity in cortical columns when using differential techniques, opening up the possibility of mapping specialized populations of neurons in humans that are not accessible to electrophysiological or other methods of invasive mapping.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (2) ◽  
pp. 378-385
Author(s):  
Tao Li ◽  
Kai Chen ◽  
Xianyue Quan

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to observe the activation response of the hypothalamus under different intensity electrical stimulation, and to explore the role of thalamus in the pain regulation network. Ten subjects were selected as normal subjects, and 41 °C and 51 °C were performed on the dorsal side of the right forearm of all subjects, respectively. CCHS mission-mode functional magnetic resonance (fMRI) scans (41 °C. CCHS-fMRI group and 51 °C CHS-fMRI group) were pre-processed with fMRI using SPM8. A single sample t-test was used to compare 41 °C CCHS-fMRI group and 51 °C. The CCHS-fMRI group underwent intragroup analysis to observe the activation of brain regions under two different temperature CHS, and recorded the activation intensity of the activation region. A paired t-test was used to explore the difference in activation between the PD group and the control group, and brain regions with statistically significant differences were analyzed. The activation intensity of the activated brain region was recorded, and the cause of the difference was analyzed. At the end of the trial, the visual analog scale (CVAS) was used to score the pain experienced by the subject at the stimulation temperature, and then the subject was subjected to a sensory quantification test (QST), including the measurement of thermal sensation (WS) and thermal pain (HP). At the same time, under the same intensity electrical stimulation, the activation signal of the lateral thalamus was stronger than that of the lateral thalamus, showing a contralateral advantage, while the bilateral thalamus lacked this manifestation. The thalamus should be an important component of the pain-regulating network. This region exhibits a segregationactivated phenomenon, and each region has its own unique stimulatory response characteristics, which helps to understand the role of the thalamus in the treatment of pain information.


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