Title :
Brain activation inhomogeneity highlighted by the Isotropic Anomalous Diffusion filter
Author :
Senra Filho, Antonio Carlos Da S. ; Rondinoni, Carlo ; Dos Santos, Antonio Carlos ; Murta Junior, Luiz O.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Univ. of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Abstract :
The visual appealing nature of the now popular BOLD fMRI may give the false impression of extreme simplicity, as if the the functional maps could be generated with the press of a single button. However, one can only get plausible maps after long and cautious processing, considering that time and noise come into play during acquisition. One of the most popular ways to account for noise and individual variability in fMRI is the use of a Gaussian spatial filter. Although very robust, this filter may introduce excessive blurring, given the strong dependence of results on the central voxel value. Here, we propose the use of the Isotropic Anomalous Diffusion (IAD) approach, aiming to reduce excessive homogenity while retaining the natural variability of signal across brain space. We found differences between Gaussian and IAD filters in two parameters gathered from Independent Component maps (ICA), identified on brain areas responsible for auditory processing during rest. Analysis of data gathered from 7 control subjects shows that the IAD filter rendered more localized active areas and higher contrast-to-noise ratios, when compared to equivalent Gaussian filtered data (Student t-test, p<;0.05). The results seem promising, since the anomalous filter performs satisfactorily in filtering noise with less distortion of individual localized brain responses.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; blood; brain; data acquisition; data analysis; distortion; filters; hearing; image denoising; independent component analysis; medical image processing; neurophysiology; oxygen; BOLD fMRI acquisition; Gaussian spatial filter effect; IAD filters; ICA parameter identification; O2; auditory processing; blurring; brain activation inhomogeneity; brain space; central voxel value dependence; contrast-to-noise ratios; data analysis; excessive homogenity reduction; fMRI noise; fMRI variability; functional map generation; functional map processing; independent component maps; isotropic anomalous diffusion filter; localized active brain areas; localized brain response distortion; noise filtering; rest condition; signal variability; Biomedical imaging; Brain; Equations; Magnetic resonance imaging; Mathematical model; Noise;
Conference_Titel :
Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society (EMBC), 2014 36th Annual International Conference of the IEEE
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
DOI :
10.1109/EMBC.2014.6944331