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Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking

We evaluated the performance of an optical camera based prospective motion correction (PMC) system in improving the quality of 3D echo-planar imaging functional MRI data. An optical camera and external marker were used to dynamically track the head movement of subjects during fMRI scanning. PMC was...

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Autores principales: Todd, Nick, Josephs, Oliver, Callaghan, Martina F., Lutti, Antoine, Weiskopf, Nikolaus
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academic Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4441089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25783205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.03.013
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author Todd, Nick
Josephs, Oliver
Callaghan, Martina F.
Lutti, Antoine
Weiskopf, Nikolaus
author_facet Todd, Nick
Josephs, Oliver
Callaghan, Martina F.
Lutti, Antoine
Weiskopf, Nikolaus
author_sort Todd, Nick
collection PubMed
description We evaluated the performance of an optical camera based prospective motion correction (PMC) system in improving the quality of 3D echo-planar imaging functional MRI data. An optical camera and external marker were used to dynamically track the head movement of subjects during fMRI scanning. PMC was performed by using the motion information to dynamically update the sequence's RF excitation and gradient waveforms such that the field-of-view was realigned to match the subject's head movement. Task-free fMRI experiments on five healthy volunteers followed a 2 × 2 × 3 factorial design with the following factors: PMC on or off; 3.0 mm or 1.5 mm isotropic resolution; and no, slow, or fast head movements. Visual and motor fMRI experiments were additionally performed on one of the volunteers at 1.5 mm resolution comparing PMC on vs PMC off for no and slow head movements. Metrics were developed to quantify the amount of motion as it occurred relative to k-space data acquisition. The motion quantification metric collapsed the very rich camera tracking data into one scalar value for each image volume that was strongly predictive of motion-induced artifacts. The PMC system did not introduce extraneous artifacts for the no motion conditions and improved the time series temporal signal-to-noise by 30% to 40% for all combinations of low/high resolution and slow/fast head movement relative to the standard acquisition with no prospective correction. The numbers of activated voxels (p < 0.001, uncorrected) in both task-based experiments were comparable for the no motion cases and increased by 78% and 330%, respectively, for PMC on versus PMC off in the slow motion cases. The PMC system is a robust solution to decrease the motion sensitivity of multi-shot 3D EPI sequences and thereby overcome one of the main roadblocks to their widespread use in fMRI studies.
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spelling pubmed-44410892015-06-01 Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking Todd, Nick Josephs, Oliver Callaghan, Martina F. Lutti, Antoine Weiskopf, Nikolaus Neuroimage Article We evaluated the performance of an optical camera based prospective motion correction (PMC) system in improving the quality of 3D echo-planar imaging functional MRI data. An optical camera and external marker were used to dynamically track the head movement of subjects during fMRI scanning. PMC was performed by using the motion information to dynamically update the sequence's RF excitation and gradient waveforms such that the field-of-view was realigned to match the subject's head movement. Task-free fMRI experiments on five healthy volunteers followed a 2 × 2 × 3 factorial design with the following factors: PMC on or off; 3.0 mm or 1.5 mm isotropic resolution; and no, slow, or fast head movements. Visual and motor fMRI experiments were additionally performed on one of the volunteers at 1.5 mm resolution comparing PMC on vs PMC off for no and slow head movements. Metrics were developed to quantify the amount of motion as it occurred relative to k-space data acquisition. The motion quantification metric collapsed the very rich camera tracking data into one scalar value for each image volume that was strongly predictive of motion-induced artifacts. The PMC system did not introduce extraneous artifacts for the no motion conditions and improved the time series temporal signal-to-noise by 30% to 40% for all combinations of low/high resolution and slow/fast head movement relative to the standard acquisition with no prospective correction. The numbers of activated voxels (p < 0.001, uncorrected) in both task-based experiments were comparable for the no motion cases and increased by 78% and 330%, respectively, for PMC on versus PMC off in the slow motion cases. The PMC system is a robust solution to decrease the motion sensitivity of multi-shot 3D EPI sequences and thereby overcome one of the main roadblocks to their widespread use in fMRI studies. Academic Press 2015-06 /pmc/articles/PMC4441089/ /pubmed/25783205 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.03.013 Text en © 2015 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Todd, Nick
Josephs, Oliver
Callaghan, Martina F.
Lutti, Antoine
Weiskopf, Nikolaus
Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking
title Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking
title_full Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking
title_fullStr Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking
title_full_unstemmed Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking
title_short Prospective motion correction of 3D echo-planar imaging data for functional MRI using optical tracking
title_sort prospective motion correction of 3d echo-planar imaging data for functional mri using optical tracking
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4441089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25783205
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.03.013
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