| Literature DB >> 18656545 |
Catie Chang1, Moriah E Thomason, Gary H Glover.
Abstract
Correlation and causality metrics can be applied to blood-oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal time series in order to infer neural synchrony and directions of information flow from fMRI data. However, the BOLD signal reflects both the underlying neural activity and the vascular response, the latter of which is governed by local vasomotor physiology. The presence of potential vascular latency differences thus poses a confound in the detection of neural synchrony as well as inferences about the causality of neural processes. In the present study, we investigate the use of a breath holding (BH) task for characterizing and correcting for voxel-wise neurovascular latency differences across the whole brain. We demonstrate that BH yields reliable measurements of relative timing differences between voxels, and further show that a BH-derived latency correction can impact both functional connectivity maps of the resting-state default-mode network and activation maps of an event-related working memory (WM) task.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18656545 PMCID: PMC2587338 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2008.06.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuroimage ISSN: 1053-8119 Impact factor: 6.556