Nonparametric analysis of statistic images from functional mapping experiments
TL;DR: In this article, a nonparametric approach to significance testing for statistic images from activation studies is presented, which is based on a simple rest-activation study, and relies only on minimal assumptions about the design of the experiment, with Type I error (almost) exactly that specified, and hence is always valid.
read more
Abstract: The analysis of functional mapping experiments in positron emission tomography involves the formation of images displaying the values of a suitable statistic, summarising the evidence in the data for a particular effect at each voxel These statistic images must then be scrutinised to locate regions showing statistically significant effects The methods most commonly used are parametric, assuming a particular form of probability distribution for the voxel values in the statistic image Scientific hypotheses, formulated in terms of parameters describing these distributions, are then tested on the basis of the assumptions Images of statistics are usually considered as lattice representations of continuous random fields These are more amenable to statistical analysis There are various shortcomings associated with these methods of analysis The many assumptions and approximations involved may not be true The low numbers of subjects and scans, in typical experiments, lead to noisy statistic images with low degrees of freedom, which are not well approximated by continuous random fields Thus, the methods are only approximately valid at best and are most suspect in single-subject studies In contrast to the existing methods, we present a nonparametric approach to significance testing for statistic images from activation studies Formal assumptions are replaced by a computationally expensive approach In a simple rest-activation study, if there is really no activation effect, the labelling of the scans as “active” or “rest” is artificial, and a statistic image formed with some other labelling is as likely as the observed one Thus, considering all possible relabellings, a p value can be computed for any suitable statistic describing the statistic image Consideration of the maximal statistic leads to a simple nonparametric single-threshold test This randomisation test relies only on minimal assumptions about the design of the experiment, is (almost) exact, with Type I error (almost) exactly that specified, and hence is always valid The absence of distributional assumptions permits the consideration of a wide range of test statistics, for instance, “pseudo” t statistic images formed with smoothed variance images The approach presented extends easily to other paradigms, permitting nonparametric analysis of most functional mapping experiments When the assumptions of the parametric methods are true, these new nonparametric methods, at worst, provide for their validation When the assumptions of the parametric methods are dubious, the nonparametric methods provide the only analysis that can be guaranteed valid and exact
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Responses to Vocalizations and Auditory Controls in the Human Newborn Brain
TL;DR: Results for the newborn brain are qualitatively and quantitatively compared with previous work on newborns, older human infants, adult humans, and adult macaques reported in previous work.
Double dissociation of N1 and P3 abnormalities in deficit and nondeficit schizophrenia.
Armida Mucci,Silvana Galderisi,Brian Kirkpatrick,Paola Bucci,Umberto Volpe,Eleonora Merlotti,Fausto Centanaro,F. Catapano,Mario Maj +8 more
TL;DR: The hypothesis that DS and NDS differ relative to event-related potentials (ERPs) is tested by assessing amplitude, scalp topography and cortical sources of the ERP components in outpatients and in matched healthy subjects.
Estimation of the probabilities of 3D clusters in functional brain images
TL;DR: A modification of the cluster analysis proposed by Roland et al. is presented, showing the method used to be specific and sensitive and is further compared with SPM96 and the nonparametric method of Holmes etAl.
Spatiotemporal Models for Region of Interest Analyses of Functional Neuroimaging Data
TL;DR: A spatiotemporal model is presented that incorporates a functionally defined distance metric into a parametric structure for spatial correlations and includes temporal correlations between repeated scans and is illustrated using data simulated from a study evaluating neural processing alterations in the right prefrontal cortex associated with mental arithmetic.
Effect of low-frequency rTMS on electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) and regional brain metabolism (PET) in schizophrenia patients with auditory hallucinations.
Jiri Horacek,Martin Brunovsky,Tomas Novak,Lucie Skrdlantova,M. Klirova,Vera Bubenikova-Valesova,Vladimir Krajca,B. Tislerova,M. Kopecek,Filip Spaniel,Pavel Mohr,Cyril Höschl +11 more
TL;DR: The findings implicate that the effect is connected with decreased metabolism in the cortex underlying the rTMS site, while facilitation of metabolism is propagated by transcallosal and intrahemispheric connections.
References
Statistical parametric maps in functional imaging: A general linear approach
Karl J. Friston,Andrew P. Holmes,Keith J. Worsley,J-B. Poline,Chris D. Frith,Richard S. J. Frackowiak +5 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a general approach that accommodates most forms of experimental layout and ensuing analysis (designed experiments with fixed effects for factors, covariates and interaction of factors).
A three-dimensional statistical analysis for CBF activation studies in human brain.
TL;DR: A simple method for determining an approximate p value for the global maximum based on the theory of Gaussian random fields is described, which focuses on the Euler characteristic of the set of voxels with a value larger than a given threshold.
2.1K
Assessing the significance of focal activations using their spatial extent
TL;DR: The results mean that detecting significant activations no longer depends on a fixed threshold, but can be effected at any (lower) threshold, in terms of the spatial extent of the activated region.
2K
The Geometry of Random Fields.
Lawrence F. Gray,Robert J. Adler +1 more
Abstract: Preface to the Classics edition Preface Corrections and comments 1. Random fields and excursion sets 2. Homogeneous fields and their spectra 3. Sample function regularity 4. Geometry and excursion characteristics 5. Some expectations 6. Local maxima and high-level excursions 7. Some non-Gaussian fields 8. Sample function erraticism and Hausdorff dimension Appendix. The Markov property for Gaussian fields References Author index Subject index.
1.9K
•Book
The Geometry of Random Fields
Robert J. Adler
- 28 Jan 2010
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a survey of random fields and excursion sets and their spectral properties, including sample function regularity, sample function erraticism, and the Markov property for Gaussian fields.
1.4K