Literature DB >> 29430941

The Not-So-Global Blood Oxygen Level-Dependent Signal.

Jacob Billings1, Shella Keilholz1,2.   

Abstract

Global signal regression is a controversial processing step for resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging, partly because the source of the global blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal remains unclear. On the one hand, nuisance factors such as motion can readily introduce coherent BOLD changes across the whole brain. On the other hand, the global signal has been linked to neural activity and vigilance levels, suggesting that it contains important neurophysiological information and should not be discarded. Any widespread pattern of coordinated activity is likely to contribute appreciably to the global signal. Such patterns may include large-scale quasiperiodic spatiotemporal patterns, known also to be tied to performance on vigilance tasks. This uncertainty surrounding the separability of the global BOLD signal from concurrent neurological processes motivated an examination of the global BOLD signal's spatial distribution. The results clarify that although the global signal collects information from all tissue classes, a diverse subset of the BOLD signal's independent components contribute the most to the global signal. Further, the timing of each network's contribution to the global signal is not consistent across volunteers, confirming the independence of a constituent process that comprises the global signal.

Entities:  

Keywords:  blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal; global BOLD signal; global signal regression; noise; quasi-periodic patterns (QPPs); resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI)

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29430941      PMCID: PMC5899288          DOI: 10.1089/brain.2017.0517

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Connect        ISSN: 2158-0014


  46 in total

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6.  Topography and behavioral relevance of the global signal in the human brain.

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