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Multi-centre, multi-vendor 7 Tesla fMRI reproducibility of hand digit representation in the human somatosensory cortex

Authors :
Ian D Driver
Rosa M Sanchez Panchuelo
Olivier Mougin
Michael Asghar
James Kolasinski
William T Clarke
Catarina Rua
Andrew T Morgan
Adrian Carpenter
Keith Muir
David Porter
Christopher T Rodgers
Stuart Clare
Richard G Wise
Richard Bowtell
Susan T Francis
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Whilst considerable progress has been made in using ultra-high field fMRI to study brain function at fine spatial resolution, methods are generally optimized at a single site and do not translate to studies where multiple sites are required for sufficient subject recruitment. With a recent increase in installations of human 7 T systems, there is now the opportunity to establish a framework for multi-site 7 T fMRI studies. However, an understanding of the inter-site variability of fMRI measurements is required for datasets to be combined across sites. To address this, we employ a hand digit localization task and compare across-site and within-site reproducibility of 7 T fMRI to a hand digit localization task which requires fine spatial resolution to resolve individual digit representations. As part of the UK7T Network “Travelling Heads” study, 10 participants repeated the same hand digit localization task at five sites with whole-body 7T MRI systems to provide a measure of inter-site variability. A subset of the participants (2 per site) performed repeated sessions at each site for measurement of intra-site reproducibility. Dice’s overlap coefficient was used to assess reproducibility, with hand region inter-site Dice = 0.70±0.04 significantly lower than intrasite Dice = 0.76±0.06, with similar trends for the individual digit maps. Although slightly lower than intra-site reproducibility, the inter-site reproducibility results are consistent with previous single site reproducibility measurements, providing evidence that multi-site 7 T fMRI studies are feasible. These results can be used to inform sample size calculations for future multi-site somatomotor mapping studies.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........4ec982e0dd7977368872072f40ac6cdd
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.03.25.437006