Todd Nick, Josephs Oliver, Callaghan Martina F, Lutti Antoine, Weiskopf Nikolaus
Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL Institute of Neurology, University College London, London, UK.
Neuroimage. 2015 Jun;113:1-12. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.03.013. Epub 2015 Mar 14.
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; 3.0mm or 1.5mm isotropic resolution; and no, slow, or fast head movements. Visual and motor fMRI experiments were additionally performed on one of the volunteers at 1.5mm 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.
我们评估了基于光学相机的前瞻性运动校正(PMC)系统在提高三维回波平面成像功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据质量方面的性能。在fMRI扫描过程中,使用光学相机和外部标记动态跟踪受试者的头部运动。通过利用运动信息动态更新序列的射频(RF)激励和梯度波形来执行PMC,从而使视野重新对齐以匹配受试者的头部运动。对五名健康志愿者进行的静息态fMRI实验采用2×2×3析因设计,包含以下因素:PMC开启或关闭;3.0毫米或1.5毫米各向同性分辨率;以及无、缓慢或快速头部运动。另外,对其中一名志愿者以1.5毫米分辨率进行了视觉和运动fMRI实验,比较了PMC开启与关闭时无头部运动和缓慢头部运动的情况。开发了一些指标来量化相对于k空间数据采集时发生的运动量。运动量化指标将非常丰富的相机跟踪数据压缩为每个图像容积的一个标量值,该值能强烈预测运动诱发的伪影。对于无运动情况,PMC系统未引入额外伪影,并且相对于无前瞻性校正的标准采集,在低/高分辨率和慢/快头部运动的所有组合情况下,时间序列的时间信噪比提高了30%至40%。在两个基于任务的实验中,无运动情况下激活体素的数量(p<0.001,未校正)相当,在慢运动情况下,PMC开启时比PMC关闭时分别增加了78%和330%。PMC系统是一种可靠的解决方案,可降低多激发三维回波平面成像(EPI)序列的运动敏感性,从而克服其在fMRI研究中广泛应用的主要障碍之一。