» Articles » PMID: 11506543

Motion Correction Algorithms May Create Spurious Brain Activations in the Absence of Subject Motion

Overview
Journal Neuroimage
Specialty Radiology
Date 2001 Aug 17
PMID 11506543
Citations 160
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

This paper describes several experiments that prove that standard motion correction methods may induce spurious activations in some motion-free fMRI studies. This artifact stems from the fact that activated areas behave like biasing outliers for the difference of square-based measures usually driving such registration methods. This effect is demonstrated first using a motion-free simulated time series including artificial activation-like signal changes. Several additional simulations explore the influence of activation amplitude and extent. The effect is finally highlighted on an actual time series obtained from a 3-T magnet. All the experiments are performed using four different realignment methods, which allows us to show that the problem may be overcome by methods based on a robust similarity measure like mutual information.

Citing Articles

Denoising task-correlated head motion from motor-task fMRI data with multi-echo ICA.

Reddy N, Zvolanek K, Moia S, Caballero-Gaudes C, Bright M Imaging Neurosci (Camb). 2024; 2.

PMID: 39328846 PMC: 11426116. DOI: 10.1162/imag_a_00057.


Aberrant resting-state functional connectivity in incarcerated women with elevated psychopathic traits.

Allen C, Maurer J, Edwards B, Gullapalli A, Harenski C, Harenski K Front Neuroimaging. 2023; 1:971201.

PMID: 37555166 PMC: 10406317. DOI: 10.3389/fnimg.2022.971201.


Psychopathic traits and altered resting-state functional connectivity in incarcerated adolescent girls.

Allen C, Maurer J, Gullapalli A, Edwards B, Aharoni E, Harenski C Front Neuroimaging. 2023; 2:1216494.

PMID: 37554634 PMC: 10406221. DOI: 10.3389/fnimg.2023.1216494.


Denoising task-correlated head motion from motor-task fMRI data with multi-echo ICA.

Reddy N, Zvolanek K, Moia S, Caballero-Gaudes C, Bright M bioRxiv. 2023; .

PMID: 37503125 PMC: 10370165. DOI: 10.1101/2023.07.19.549746.


Refugee visa insecurity disrupts the brain's default mode network.

Liddell B, Das P, Malhi G, Nickerson A, Felmingham K, Askovic M Eur J Psychotraumatol. 2023; 14(2):2213595.

PMID: 37289090 PMC: 10251781. DOI: 10.1080/20008066.2023.2213595.