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A temporal decomposition method for identifying venous effects in task-based fMRI
by
Uğurbil, Kamil
, Jamison, Keith W.
, Zhang, Ru-Yuan
, Kay, Kendrick
in
631/114/1564
/ 631/114/794
/ 631/1647/245/1627
/ 631/378/116
/ Adult
/ Basis functions
/ Bioinformatics
/ Biological Microscopy
/ Biological Techniques
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedical Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Brain - blood supply
/ Brain - physiology
/ Brain Mapping - methods
/ Capillaries
/ Decomposition
/ Female
/ Functional magnetic resonance imaging
/ Hemodynamics - physiology
/ Humans
/ Image Processing, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Life Sciences
/ Magnetic resonance imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Male
/ Methods
/ Microvasculature
/ Oxygen - blood
/ Oxygenation
/ Proteomics
/ Spatial discrimination
/ Spatial resolution
/ Veins
/ Young Adult
2020
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A temporal decomposition method for identifying venous effects in task-based fMRI
by
Uğurbil, Kamil
, Jamison, Keith W.
, Zhang, Ru-Yuan
, Kay, Kendrick
in
631/114/1564
/ 631/114/794
/ 631/1647/245/1627
/ 631/378/116
/ Adult
/ Basis functions
/ Bioinformatics
/ Biological Microscopy
/ Biological Techniques
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedical Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Brain - blood supply
/ Brain - physiology
/ Brain Mapping - methods
/ Capillaries
/ Decomposition
/ Female
/ Functional magnetic resonance imaging
/ Hemodynamics - physiology
/ Humans
/ Image Processing, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Life Sciences
/ Magnetic resonance imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Male
/ Methods
/ Microvasculature
/ Oxygen - blood
/ Oxygenation
/ Proteomics
/ Spatial discrimination
/ Spatial resolution
/ Veins
/ Young Adult
2020
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
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A temporal decomposition method for identifying venous effects in task-based fMRI
by
Uğurbil, Kamil
, Jamison, Keith W.
, Zhang, Ru-Yuan
, Kay, Kendrick
in
631/114/1564
/ 631/114/794
/ 631/1647/245/1627
/ 631/378/116
/ Adult
/ Basis functions
/ Bioinformatics
/ Biological Microscopy
/ Biological Techniques
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Biomedical Engineering/Biotechnology
/ Brain - blood supply
/ Brain - physiology
/ Brain Mapping - methods
/ Capillaries
/ Decomposition
/ Female
/ Functional magnetic resonance imaging
/ Hemodynamics - physiology
/ Humans
/ Image Processing, Computer-Assisted - methods
/ Life Sciences
/ Magnetic resonance imaging
/ Magnetic Resonance Imaging - methods
/ Male
/ Methods
/ Microvasculature
/ Oxygen - blood
/ Oxygenation
/ Proteomics
/ Spatial discrimination
/ Spatial resolution
/ Veins
/ Young Adult
2020
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A temporal decomposition method for identifying venous effects in task-based fMRI
Journal Article
A temporal decomposition method for identifying venous effects in task-based fMRI
2020
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Overview
The spatial resolution of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is fundamentally limited by effects from large draining veins. Here we describe an analysis method that provides data-driven estimates of these effects in task-based fMRI. The method involves fitting a one-dimensional manifold that characterizes variation in response timecourses observed in a given dataset, and then using identified early and late timecourses as basis functions for decomposing responses into components related to the microvasculature (capillaries and small venules) and the macrovasculature (large veins), respectively. We show the removal of late components substantially reduces the superficial cortical depth bias of fMRI responses and helps eliminate artifacts in cortical activity maps. This method provides insight into the origins of the fMRI signal and can be used to improve the spatial accuracy of fMRI.
Temporal decomposition through manifold fitting (TDM) is an analysis technique that decomposes blood oxygenation level dependent (BOLD) responses in task-based fMRI into different components that likely correspond to microvasculature- and macrovasculature-driven signals.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group US,Nature Publishing Group
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