| Literature DB >> 25032500 |
Peter T Fox1, Jack L Lancaster, Angela R Laird, Simon B Eickhoff.
Abstract
Spatial normalization--applying standardized coordinates as anatomical addresses within a reference space--was introduced to human neuroimaging research nearly 30 years ago. Over these three decades, an impressive series of methodological advances have adopted, extended, and popularized this standard. Collectively, this work has generated a methodologically coherent literature of unprecedented rigor, size, and scope. Large-scale online databases have compiled these observations and their associated meta-data, stimulating the development of meta-analytic methods to exploit this expanding corpus. Coordinate-based meta-analytic methods have emerged and evolved in rigor and utility. Early methods computed cross-study consensus, in a manner roughly comparable to traditional (nonimaging) meta-analysis. Recent advances now compute coactivation-based connectivity, connectivity-based functional parcellation, and complex network models powered from data sets representing tens of thousands of subjects. Meta-analyses of human neuroimaging data in large-scale databases now stand at the forefront of computational neurobiology.Entities:
Keywords: ALE; MRI; activation likelihood estimation; fMRI; human brain mapping; magnetic resonance imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25032500 PMCID: PMC4782802 DOI: 10.1146/annurev-neuro-062012-170320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Neurosci ISSN: 0147-006X Impact factor: 12.449