1 / 30

Lee Friedman, Ph.D. And Gary Glover, Ph.D.

Controlling for Scanner-to-Scanner Variance in Multicenter FMRI Studies: Covariation with Signal-to-Fluctuation Noise Ratio (SFNR). Lee Friedman, Ph.D. And Gary Glover, Ph.D. Overall Goal. To evaluate scanner effects on brain activation patterns in multisite fMRI studies

cutter
Download Presentation

Lee Friedman, Ph.D. And Gary Glover, Ph.D.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Controlling for Scanner-to-Scanner Variance in Multicenter FMRI Studies: Covariation with Signal-to-Fluctuation Noise Ratio (SFNR) Lee Friedman, Ph.D. And Gary Glover, Ph.D.

  2. Overall Goal • To evaluate scanner effects on brain activation patterns in multisite fMRI studies • To determine the cause of these scanner effects • To develop methods to reduce such scanner effects

  3. Methods • 5 young healthy males traveled to 10 sites • Underwent identical fMRI studies on 2 separate days • Studied on multiple tasks – will emphasize the Sensorimotor (SM) Task and the Resting-State Scans • Why I keep analyzing the SM Task? • Same 5 subjects all sites • Reduces subject variance • Allows for estimation of scanner effects with no between-site effects due to different subjects. • Very robust task – substantially more robust than SIRP or Oddball • Well understood task

  4. Functional Image Acquisition • Pulse sequence = EPI or Spiral GRE • Scan plane = oblique axial, AC-PC, copy T2 • FOV = 220 mm • 35 slices, contiguous 4mm • TR = 3000ms TE = 30ms (3T/4T), 40ms (1.5T) • FA = 90 degrees • BW >= ±100 kHz • 64x64 matrix, 1 shot

  5. Sensorimotor Task Block trials, 15s “on”, 15s “off”, 8 blocks. On Block: • Alternating contrast checkerboard. • Binaural tones generated. This is an auditorily annoying, mistonal scale. • Subject performs bilateral finger apposition at 3Hz, in time with visual and auditory cues. Off Block: Fixation cross, silence, no motion. 4 runs, 4.25 min each

  6. Resting-State Scans • Stare at fixation cross. • Two runs, 85 TRs (4.25 min)

  7. We Measured 6 Types of SFNRbut Will Focus on 2 for Simplicity • SFNR – GM – REST • Based on Resting-State Data • (Mean GM intensity)/(SD Gray Matter Intensity) • SFNR – GM – RESID • Based on the SM Task, not Resting-State • GLM model intercept is used as Signal • SD of GLM Model Residuals used as Fluctuation Noise.

  8. Analysis Pipeline for SM Task • AFNI – despike (conservative threshold), motion correction, slice time correction, detrend (2nd order polynomial) • SPM – Spatial normalization to MNI Space • Data presented in radiological convention, Image Left is Patient Right • Level 1 analysis using FMRISTAT – Worsley’s fMRI analysis package. • http://www.math.mcgill.ca/keith/fmristat • Prewhitens – removes temporally autocorrelated residuals • Regressors: • (1) blocks convolved HRF • (2) derivative of #1 • Statistic carried to Level II: • Multiple r2 for both regressors, i.e., • Percent of Total Temporal Variance accounted for by both regressors, i.e,: • Percent of Variance Accounted For or PVAF

  9. Why Choose PVAF as Level I Statistic ? • FMRI researchers are primarily interested in evaluating brain activation patterns. • Brain activation patterns are typically produced by thresholding statistical maps (t-maps, F-maps, etc …) and looking only at voxels activated above a statistical threshold. • Efforts to homogenize brain activation effect size (like PVAF) will result in homogenization of patterns of activation across sites. • Since beta-weights alone carry no information about the statistical significance or CNR of an effect, they alone are poor candidates for use in homogenizing activations patterns across sites. They are useful in homogenizing signal amplitude across sites, which is important.

  10. Level II Analysis of Scanner Effects • Data were available for 5 subjects at 10 scanners. • Each subject was scanned on 2 visits, and there were 4 runs per visit. • The scanners were divided into low-field strength scanners (five scanners at 1.5T) and high-field strength scanners (four 3T and one 4T scanner). • All analyses were performed in SAS PROC MIXED (ReML). • To assess the effect of scanner (within field) without correction, a mixed model ANOVA was employed. PVAF was the dependent variable. Scanner was modeled as a fixed effect. Subject, visit, subject-by-visit, site-by-subject, site-by-visit, site-by-subject-by-visit were modeled as random effects. • To assess the effectiveness of various SFNR estimates, each SFNR estimate was entered singly as a covariate into the above model.

  11. Level II Analysis of Scanner Effects - Analyses were conducted for separately for low-field scanners and high-field scanners, and for 8 ROIs (LA, RA, LC, RC, LM, RM, SM and the average, AV). Did not analyze visual cortex (why?) -For each visit, each subject had only a single SFNR-GM-REST estimate from the resting-state data. So all four runs of the SM task were corrected with the same SFNR covariate. -However, for SFNR-GM-RESID estimates based on the SM task rather than the resting state scan, each individual run of the SM task was corrected by an SFNR estimate from that same run. Criteria for Ranking the SFNR Types: (1) The number of statistically significant F-tests for the scanner effect in each model was calculated. (2) The coefficient of variation (CV) was calculated for the estimated scanner means for each model.

  12. ROIs and Masks “Anatomical Model of Normal Brain” described at: http://www.bic.mni.mcgill.ca/brainweb/l

  13. Why I don’t analyze the Visual Cortex A communality is the proportion of variance in a variable accounted for collectively by all the other variables.

  14. Scanner Differences on SFNRResting-State Data – Gray Matter Low Field: F(scanner) = 103.2, p <.0001 High Field: F(scanner) = 15.6 , p <.0001

  15. Low Field : F = 28.8, df = 1,4, p = 0.0058 high field: F = 17.8, df = 1,4, p = 0.0135 High Field Low Field Relationship between SFNR-GM-REST and PVAF

  16. Is the Relationship between SFNR and PVAF Linear:Low Field

  17. Is the Relationship between SFNR and PVAF Linear?High Field

  18. Effect of SFNR-GM-REST Adjustment on F-tests for the Scanner Effect Low Field Scanners

  19. Effect of SFNR-GM-REST Adjustment on F-tests for the Scanner Effect High Field Scanners

  20. Comparing SFNR Estimates

  21. Variance Components Analysis

  22. Why do subjects vary in SFNR when measured on the Same Scanner ? • Subjects may vary on the signal (?,bigger heads closer to the coil ?) • Most likely due to physiological noise: • Respiration • Cardiac aliased signals • Brain pulsations • Background metabolic and neuronal activity • Components of physiological noise are a function of • Tissue type (GM vs WM) • Field Strength • Voxel Size • Flip Angle

  23. What is in the Noise in fMRI? • The intrinsic signal-to-noise ratio in NMR imaging. • Edelstein WA, Glover GH, Hardy CJ, Redington RW. • Magn Reson Med. 1986 Aug;3(4):604-18. • Physiological noise in oxygenation-sensitive magnetic resonance imaging • Kruger G, Glover GH.. • Magn Reson Med. 2001 Oct;46(4):631-7. • Neuroimaging at 1.5 T and 3.0 T: comparison of oxygenation-sensitive magnetic resonance imaging • Kruger G, Kastrup A, Glover GH. • Magn Reson Med. 2001 Apr;45(4):595-604. • Comparison of physiological noise at 1.5 T, 3 T and 7 T and optimization of fMRI acquisition parameters • Triantafyllou C, Hoge RD, Krueger G, Wiggins CJ, Potthast A, Wiggins GC, Wald LL. • Neuroimage. 2005 May 15;26(1):243-50.

  24. Conclusions • Using SFNR as a covariate is effective in reducing the effect of scanner on activation effect size • Using an SFNR estimate based on the SM task itself is an effective approach – no resting state data is needed. • Subject variance due to physiological noise is also controlled with this method.

  25. Physiological Noise at 3T At 3.0 T, the physiological noise is of increasing influence at higher excitation flip angles (larger signals) and results in the divergence of the SNR-to-SNR0 ratio from the line-of identity (dotted line). Kruger, Kastrup, and Glover, 2001

  26. SFNR Means

More Related