| Literature DB >> 20589093 |
Dongqiang Liu1, Chaogan Yan, Juejing Ren, Li Yao, Vesa J Kiviniemi, Yufeng Zang.
Abstract
In this study, we applied coherence to voxel-wise measurement of regional homogeneity of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (RS-fMRI) signal. We compared the current method, regional homogeneity based on coherence (Cohe-ReHo), with previously proposed method, ReHo based on Kendall's coefficient of concordance (KCC-ReHo), in terms of correlation and paired t-test in a large sample of healthy participants. We found the two measurements differed mainly in some brain regions where physiological noise is dominant. We also compared the sensitivity of these methods in detecting difference between resting-state conditions [eyes open (EO) vs. eyes closed (EC)] and in detecting abnormal local synchronization between two groups [attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) patients vs. normal controls]. Our results indicated that Cohe-ReHo is more sensitive than KCC-ReHo to the difference between two conditions (EO vs. EC) as well as that between ADHD and normal controls. These preliminary results suggest that Cohe-ReHo is superior to KCC-ReHo. A possible reason is that coherence is not susceptible to random noise induced by phase delay among the time courses to be measured. However, further investigation is still needed to elucidate the sensitivity and specificity of these methods.Entities:
Keywords: coherence; local feature; regional homogeneity; resting-state fMRI
Year: 2010 PMID: 20589093 PMCID: PMC2893000 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2010.00024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Figure 1One-sample . The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.
Figure 2Correlation map between Cohe-ReHo and KCC-ReHo of Dataset-1 (A) and Dataset-2 (B), respectively. The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.
Figure 3Results of paired . The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.
Figure 4Brain regions showing significantly different Cohe-ReHo (A) and KCC-ReHo (B) between EO and EC resting states. The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.
Figure 5Cohe-ReHo and KCC-ReHo have different sensitivity to the difference of local synchronization between EO and EC resting states. Yellow color means Cohe-ReHo is more sensitive than KCC-ReHo. The green color means the opposite. The blue color means that the two measurements have no significant differences in their sensitivity in detecting differences between EC and EO. The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.
Figure 6Brain regions showing significantly different Cohe-ReHo (A) and KCC-ReHo (B) between ADHD group and control group (. The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.
Figure 7Cohe-ReHo and KCC-ReHo had different sensitivity to the difference in local synchronization between ADHD and control groups. Yellow color means Cohe-ReHo is more sensitive than KCC-ReHo. The green color means the opposite direction. The blue color means that the two measurements have no significant difference in their sensitivity in detecting differences between the two groups. The left side of the image corresponds to the right side of brain.