Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal

<p>The blood oxygen level dependent functional MRI (BOLD-fMRI) signal is an indirect measure of the neuronal activity that most BOLD studies are interested in. This thesis uses generative embedding algorithms to investigate some of the challenges and opportunities that this presents for BOLD i...

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Main Author: Maczka, M
Other Authors: Marchini, J
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
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author Maczka, M
author2 Marchini, J
author_facet Marchini, J
Maczka, M
author_sort Maczka, M
collection OXFORD
description <p>The blood oxygen level dependent functional MRI (BOLD-fMRI) signal is an indirect measure of the neuronal activity that most BOLD studies are interested in. This thesis uses generative embedding algorithms to investigate some of the challenges and opportunities that this presents for BOLD imaging.</p> <p>It is standard practice to analyse BOLD signals using general linear models (GLMs) that assume fixed neurovascular coupling. However, this assumption may cause false positive or negative neural activations to be detected if the biological manifestations of brain diseases, disorders and pharmaceutical drugs (termed "neuromodulations") alter this coupling. Generative embedding can help overcome this problem by identifying when a neuromodulation confounds the standard GLM. When applied to anaesthetic neuromodulations found in preclinical imaging data, Fentanyl has the smallest confounding effect and Pentobarbital has the largest, causing extremely significant neural activations to go undetected. Half of the anaesthetics tested caused overestimation of the neuronal activity but the other half caused underestimation. The variability in biological action between anaesthetic modulations in identical brain regions of genetically similar animals highlights the complexity required to comprehensively account for factors confounding neurovascular coupling in GLMs generally. Generative embedding has the potential to augment established algorithms used to compensate for these variations in GLMs without complicating the standard (ANOVA) way of reporting BOLD results.</p> <p>Neuromodulation of neurovascular coupling can also present opportunities, such as improved diagnosis, monitoring and understanding of brain diseases accompanied by neurovascular uncoupling. Information theory is used to show that the discriminabilities of neurodegenerative-diseased and healthy generative posterior parameter spaces make generative embedding a viable tool for these commercial applications, boasting sensitivity to neurovascular coupling nonlinearities and biological interpretability. The value of hybrid neuroimaging systems over separate neuroimaging technologies is found to be greatest for early-stage neurodegenerative disease.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:96d46d4d-480b-48d7-9f2d-060e76c5f8aa2022-03-26T23:55:36ZInvestigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signalThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:96d46d4d-480b-48d7-9f2d-060e76c5f8aaStatisticsNeuroimagingEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2013Maczka, MMarchini, JWoolrich, MMartin, C<p>The blood oxygen level dependent functional MRI (BOLD-fMRI) signal is an indirect measure of the neuronal activity that most BOLD studies are interested in. This thesis uses generative embedding algorithms to investigate some of the challenges and opportunities that this presents for BOLD imaging.</p> <p>It is standard practice to analyse BOLD signals using general linear models (GLMs) that assume fixed neurovascular coupling. However, this assumption may cause false positive or negative neural activations to be detected if the biological manifestations of brain diseases, disorders and pharmaceutical drugs (termed "neuromodulations") alter this coupling. Generative embedding can help overcome this problem by identifying when a neuromodulation confounds the standard GLM. When applied to anaesthetic neuromodulations found in preclinical imaging data, Fentanyl has the smallest confounding effect and Pentobarbital has the largest, causing extremely significant neural activations to go undetected. Half of the anaesthetics tested caused overestimation of the neuronal activity but the other half caused underestimation. The variability in biological action between anaesthetic modulations in identical brain regions of genetically similar animals highlights the complexity required to comprehensively account for factors confounding neurovascular coupling in GLMs generally. Generative embedding has the potential to augment established algorithms used to compensate for these variations in GLMs without complicating the standard (ANOVA) way of reporting BOLD results.</p> <p>Neuromodulation of neurovascular coupling can also present opportunities, such as improved diagnosis, monitoring and understanding of brain diseases accompanied by neurovascular uncoupling. Information theory is used to show that the discriminabilities of neurodegenerative-diseased and healthy generative posterior parameter spaces make generative embedding a viable tool for these commercial applications, boasting sensitivity to neurovascular coupling nonlinearities and biological interpretability. The value of hybrid neuroimaging systems over separate neuroimaging technologies is found to be greatest for early-stage neurodegenerative disease.</p>
spellingShingle Statistics
Neuroimaging
Maczka, M
Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal
title Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal
title_full Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal
title_fullStr Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal
title_full_unstemmed Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal
title_short Investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the BOLD-fMRI signal
title_sort investigations into the effects of neuromodulations on the bold fmri signal
topic Statistics
Neuroimaging
work_keys_str_mv AT maczkam investigationsintotheeffectsofneuromodulationsontheboldfmrisignal