Literature DB >> 20933093

Reproducibility of fMRI activations associated with auditory sentence comprehension.

Javier Gonzalez-Castillo1, Thomas M Talavage.   

Abstract

The reproducibility of three different aspects of fMRI activations-namely binary activation maps, effect size and spatial distribution of local maxima-was evaluated for an auditory sentence comprehension task with high attention demand on a group of 17 subjects that were scanned on five different occasions. While in the scanner subjects were asked to listen to a series of six short everyday sentences from the CUNY sentence test. Comprehension and attention to the stimuli were monitored after each listen condition epoch by having subjects answer a series of multiple-choice questions. Statistical maps of activation for the listen condition were computed at three different levels: overall results for all imaging sessions, group-level/single-session results for each of the five imaging occasions, and single-subject/single-session results computed for each subject and each scanning occasion independently. The experimental task recruited a distributed bilateral network with processing nodes located in the lateral temporal cortex, inferior frontal cortex, medial BA6, medial occipital cortex and subcortical structures such as the putamen and the thalamus. Reproducibility of these activations at the group level was high (83.95% of the imaged volume was consistently classified as active/inactive across all five imaging sessions), indicating that sites of neuronal activity associated with auditory comprehension can reliably be detected with fMRI in healthy subjects, across repeated measures after group averaging. At the single-subject level reproducibility ranged from moderate to high, although no significant differences were found on behavioral measures across subjects or sessions. This result suggests that contextual differences-i.e., those specific to each imaging session, can modulate our ability to detect fMRI activations associated with speech comprehension in individual subjects.
Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20933093      PMCID: PMC3008333          DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.09.082

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  62 in total

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8.  Reproducibility of functional MR imaging results using two different MR systems.

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9.  The contribution of visual areas to speech comprehension: a PET study in cochlear implants patients and normal-hearing subjects.

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  10 in total

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Review 6.  Functional imaging of the thalamus in language.

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7.  Neural correlates of adaptation in freely-moving normal hearing subjects under cochlear implant acoustic simulations.

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8.  Validity and reliability of four language mapping paradigms.

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9.  Modulation of auditory cortex response to pitch variation following training with microtonal melodies.

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10.  Small sample sizes reduce the replicability of task-based fMRI studies.

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  10 in total

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