Moving beyond processing- and analysis-related variation in resting-state functional brain imaging.

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Název: Moving beyond processing- and analysis-related variation in resting-state functional brain imaging.
Autoři: Li, X., Bianchini Esper, N., Ai, L., Giavasis, S., Jin, H., Feczko, E., Xu, T., Clucas, J., Franco, A., Sólon Heinsfeld, A., Adebimpe, A., Vogelstein, J.T., Yan, C.G., Esteban, O., Poldrack, R.A., Craddock, C., Fair, D., Satterthwaite, T., Kiar, G., Milham, M.P.
Rok vydání: 2025
Sbírka: Université de Lausanne (UNIL): Serval - Serveur académique lausannois
Témata: Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods, Brain/diagnostic imaging, Brain/physiology, Reproducibility of Results, Image Processing, Computer-Assisted/methods, Functional Neuroimaging/methods, Adult, Brain Mapping/methods, Male, Female, Rest/physiology
Popis: When fields lack consensus standard methods and accessible ground truths, reproducibility can be more of an ideal than a reality. Such has been the case for functional neuroimaging, where there exists a sprawling space of tools and processing pipelines. We provide a critical evaluation of the impact of differences across five independently developed minimal preprocessing pipelines for functional magnetic resonance imaging. We show that, even when handling identical data, interpipeline agreement was only moderate, critically shedding light on a factor that limits cross-study reproducibility. We show that low interpipeline agreement can go unrecognized until the reliability of the underlying data is high, which is increasingly the case as the field progresses. Crucially we show that, when interpipeline agreement is compromised, so too is the consistency of insights from brain-wide association studies. We highlight the importance of comparing analytic configurations, because both widely discussed and commonly overlooked decisions can lead to marked variation.
Druh dokumentu: article in journal/newspaper
Jazyk: English
ISSN: 2397-3374
Relation: Nature Human Behaviour; https://iris.unil.ch/handle/iris/86597; serval:BIB_489CF15FC19C; 001285405400001
DOI: 10.1038/s41562-024-01942-4
Dostupnost: https://iris.unil.ch/handle/iris/86597
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41562-024-01942-4
Přístupové číslo: edsbas.FE78FD38
Databáze: BASE
Popis
Abstrakt:When fields lack consensus standard methods and accessible ground truths, reproducibility can be more of an ideal than a reality. Such has been the case for functional neuroimaging, where there exists a sprawling space of tools and processing pipelines. We provide a critical evaluation of the impact of differences across five independently developed minimal preprocessing pipelines for functional magnetic resonance imaging. We show that, even when handling identical data, interpipeline agreement was only moderate, critically shedding light on a factor that limits cross-study reproducibility. We show that low interpipeline agreement can go unrecognized until the reliability of the underlying data is high, which is increasingly the case as the field progresses. Crucially we show that, when interpipeline agreement is compromised, so too is the consistency of insights from brain-wide association studies. We highlight the importance of comparing analytic configurations, because both widely discussed and commonly overlooked decisions can lead to marked variation.
ISSN:23973374
DOI:10.1038/s41562-024-01942-4