Presentation + Paper
2 April 2024 Identification of functional white matter networks in BOLD fMRI
Alexa L. Eby, Lucas W. Remedios, Michael E. Kim, Muwei Li, Yurui Gao, John C. Gore, Kurt G. Schilling, Bennett A. Landman
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
White matter signals in resting state blood oxygen level dependent functional magnetic resonance (BOLD-fMRI) have been largely discounted, yet there is growing evidence that these signals are indicative of brain activity. Understanding how these white matter signals capture function can provide insight into brain physiology. Moreover, functional signals could potentially be used as early markers for neurological changes, such as in Alzheimer’s Disease. To investigate white matter brain networks, we leveraged the OASIS-3 dataset to extract white matter signals from resting state BOLDFMRI data on 711 subjects. The imaging was longitudinal with a total of 2,026 images. Hierarchical clustering was performed to investigate clusters of voxel-level correlations on the timeseries data. The stability of clusters was measured with the average Dice coefficients on two different cross fold validations. The first validated the stability between scans, and the second validated the stability between subject populations. Functional clusters at hierarchical levels 4, 9, 13, 18, and 24 had local maximum stability, suggesting better clustered white matter. In comparison with JHU-DTI-SS Type-I Atlas defined regions, clusters at lower hierarchical levels identified well defined anatomical lobes. At higher hierarchical levels, functional clusters mapped motor and memory functional regions, identifying 50.00%, 20.00%, 27.27%, and 35.14% of the frontal, occipital, parietal, and temporal lobe regions respectively.
Conference Presentation
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Alexa L. Eby, Lucas W. Remedios, Michael E. Kim, Muwei Li, Yurui Gao, John C. Gore, Kurt G. Schilling, and Bennett A. Landman "Identification of functional white matter networks in BOLD fMRI", Proc. SPIE 12926, Medical Imaging 2024: Image Processing, 129260T (2 April 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3006231
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KEYWORDS
White matter

Voxels

Functional magnetic resonance imaging

Brain

Visualization

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