An important issue in the analysis of fMRI is how to account for the spatial smoothness of activated regions. In this article a method is proposed to accomplish this by modeling activated regions with Gaussian shapes. Hypothesis tests on the location, spatial extent, and amplitude of these regions are performed instead of hypothesis tests of individual voxels. This increases power and eases interpretation. Simulation studies show robust hypothesis tests under misspecification of the shape model, and increased power over standard techniques especially at low signal-to-noise ratios. An application to real single-subject data also indicates that the method has increased power over standard methods
A fundamental question in functional MRI (fMRI) data analysis is to declare pixels either activated ...
WOS: 000402214800002PubMed ID: 28494993We propose two contributions with novel approaches to fMRI ac...
In fMRI, localizer tasks are often used to define and examine the activity of functional regions of ...
In standard fMRI analysis all voxels are tested in a massive univariate approach, that is, each voxe...
In standard fMRI analysis all voxels are tested in a massive univariate approach, that is, each voxe...
This paper describes a new methodology and associated theoretical analysis for rapid and accurate ex...
Data from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) consist of time series of brain images that a...
Although spatial smoothing of fMRI data can serve multiple purposes, increasing the sensitivity of a...
Although spatial smoothing of fMRI data can serve multiple purposes, increasing the sensitivity of a...
Abstract: Many fMRI experiments have a common objective of identifying active voxels in a neuroi-mag...
Single-subject fMRI experiments identify active voxels by performing individual voxelwise tests of t...
Although spatial smoothing of fMRI data can serve multiple purposes, increasing the sensitivity of a...
Event-related fMRI is a powerful tool for localising psychological functions to specific brain areas...
A new functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) analysis approach based on invariant spatial desc...
Cluster-size tests (CST) based on random field theory have been widely adopted in fMRI data analysis...
A fundamental question in functional MRI (fMRI) data analysis is to declare pixels either activated ...
WOS: 000402214800002PubMed ID: 28494993We propose two contributions with novel approaches to fMRI ac...
In fMRI, localizer tasks are often used to define and examine the activity of functional regions of ...
In standard fMRI analysis all voxels are tested in a massive univariate approach, that is, each voxe...
In standard fMRI analysis all voxels are tested in a massive univariate approach, that is, each voxe...
This paper describes a new methodology and associated theoretical analysis for rapid and accurate ex...
Data from functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) consist of time series of brain images that a...
Although spatial smoothing of fMRI data can serve multiple purposes, increasing the sensitivity of a...
Although spatial smoothing of fMRI data can serve multiple purposes, increasing the sensitivity of a...
Abstract: Many fMRI experiments have a common objective of identifying active voxels in a neuroi-mag...
Single-subject fMRI experiments identify active voxels by performing individual voxelwise tests of t...
Although spatial smoothing of fMRI data can serve multiple purposes, increasing the sensitivity of a...
Event-related fMRI is a powerful tool for localising psychological functions to specific brain areas...
A new functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) analysis approach based on invariant spatial desc...
Cluster-size tests (CST) based on random field theory have been widely adopted in fMRI data analysis...
A fundamental question in functional MRI (fMRI) data analysis is to declare pixels either activated ...
WOS: 000402214800002PubMed ID: 28494993We propose two contributions with novel approaches to fMRI ac...
In fMRI, localizer tasks are often used to define and examine the activity of functional regions of ...