An empirical investigation of the benefit of increasing the temporal resolution of task-evoked fMRI data with multi-band imaging

MAGMA. 2021 Oct;34(5):667-676. doi: 10.1007/s10334-021-00918-z. Epub 2021 Mar 25.

Abstract

Objective: There is a tendency for reducing TR in MRI experiments with multi-band imaging. We empirically investigate its benefit for the group-level statistical outcome in task-evoked fMRI.

Methods: Three visual fMRI data sets were collected from 17 healthy adult participants. Multi-band acquisition helped vary the TR (2000/1000/410 ms, respectively). Because these data sets capture different temporal aspects of the haemodynamic response (HRF), we tested several HRF models. We computed a composite descriptive statistic, H, from β's of each first-level model fit and carried it to the group-level analysis. The number of activated voxels and the t value of the group-level analysis as well as a goodness-of-fit measure were used as surrogate markers of data quality for comparison.

Results: Increasing the temporal sampling rate did not provide a universal improvement in the group-level statistical outcome. Rather, both the voxel-wise and ROI-averaged group-level results varied widely with anatomical location, choice of HRF and the setting of the TR. Correspondingly, the goodness-of-fit of HRFs became worse with increasing the sampling frequency.

Conclusion: Rather than universally increasing the temporal sampling rate in cognitive fMRI experiments, these results advocate the performance of a pilot study for the specific ROIs of interest to identify the appropriate temporal sampling rate for the acquisition and the correspondingly suitable HRF for the analysis of the data.

Keywords: Goodness-of-fit; Multi-band; SNR; Temporal sampling rate; fMRI.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Brain Mapping
  • Hemodynamics*
  • Humans
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging*
  • Pilot Projects