Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Front Neurosci" Category Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Congenital Deafness Leads to Altered Overt Oculomotor Behaviors. Sharp A, Turgeon C, Johnson AP, Pannasch S, Champoux F, Ellemberg D 32327967
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Inferior Longitudinal Fasciculus' Role in Visual Processing and Language Comprehension: A Combined MEG-DTI Study. Shin J, Rowley J, Chowdhury R, Jolicoeur P, Klein D, Grova C, Rosa-Neto P, Kobayashi E 31507359
PERFORM
3 Aromatization Is Not Required for the Facilitation of Appetitive Sexual Behaviors in Ovariectomized Rats Treated With Estradiol and Testosterone. Jones SL, Rosenbaum S, Gardner Gregory J, Pfaus JG 31447629
CSBN
4 Processing of Acoustic Information in Lexical Tone Production and Perception by Pediatric Cochlear Implant Recipients. Deroche MLD, Lu HP, Lin YS, Chatterjee M, Peng SC 31281237
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Influence of Head Tissue Conductivity Uncertainties on EEG Dipole Reconstruction. Vorwerk J, Aydin Ü, Wolters CH, Butson CR 31231178
PERFORM
6 Partially Overlapping Brain Networks for Singing and Cello Playing. Segado M, Hollinger A, Thibodeau J, Penhune V, Zatorre RJ 29892211
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Integrated fMRI Preprocessing Framework Using Extended Kalman Filter for Estimation of Slice-Wise Motion. Pinsard B, Boutin A, Doyon J, Benali H 29755312
PERFORM
8 Detection of abnormal resting-state networks in individual patients suffering from focal epilepsy: an initial step toward individual connectivity assessment. Dansereau CL, Bellec P, Lee K, Pittau F, Gotman J, Grova C 25565949
PERFORM
9 The Music-In-Noise Task (MINT): A Tool for Dissecting Complex Auditory Perception. Coffey EBJ, Arseneau-Bruneau I, Zhang X, Zatorre RJ 30930734
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Integrated fMRI Preprocessing Framework Using Extended Kalman Filter for Estimation of Slice-Wise Motion.
Authors:Pinsard BBoutin ADoyon JBenali H
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29755312?dopt=Abstract
DOI:10.3389/fnins.2018.00268
Publication:Frontiers in neuroscience
Keywords:BOLDdenoisingdistortion correctionfMRImotion correctionvisualization
PMID:29755312 Category:Front Neurosci Date Added:2019-06-04
Dept Affiliation: PERFORM
1 Unité de Neuroimagerie Fonctionelle, Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Universitaire de Gériatrie de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 UMR7371 Laboratoire d'Imagerie Biomédicale, Paris, France.
3 Sorbonne Universités, Paris, France.
4 Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
5 PERFORM Center, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Integrated fMRI Preprocessing Framework Using Extended Kalman Filter for Estimation of Slice-Wise Motion.

Front Neurosci. 2018;12:268

Authors: Pinsard B, Boutin A, Doyon J, Benali H

Abstract

Functional MRI acquisition is sensitive to subjects' motion that cannot be fully constrained. Therefore, signal corrections have to be applied a posteriori in order to mitigate the complex interactions between changing tissue localization and magnetic fields, gradients and readouts. To circumvent current preprocessing strategies limitations, we developed an integrated method that correct motion and spatial low-frequency intensity fluctuations at the level of each slice in order to better fit the acquisition processes. The registration of single or multiple simultaneously acquired slices is achieved online by an Iterated Extended Kalman Filter, favoring the robust estimation of continuous motion, while an intensity bias field is non-parametrically fitted. The proposed extraction of gray-matter BOLD activity from the acquisition space to an anatomical group template space, taking into account distortions, better preserves fine-scale patterns of activity. Importantly, the proposed unified framework generalizes to high-resolution multi-slice techniques. When tested on simulated and real data the latter shows a reduction of motion explained variance and signal variability when compared to the conventional preprocessing approach. These improvements provide more stable patterns of activity, facilitating investigation of cerebral information representation in healthy and/or clinical populations where motion is known to impact fine-scale data.

PMID: 29755312 [PubMed]





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