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Reproducibility and Temporal Structure in Weekly Resting-State fMRI over a Period of 3.5 Years

Author

Listed:
  • Ann S Choe
  • Craig K Jones
  • Suresh E Joel
  • John Muschelli
  • Visar Belegu
  • Brian S Caffo
  • Martin A Lindquist
  • Peter C M van Zijl
  • James J Pekar

Abstract

Resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) permits study of the brain’s functional networks without requiring participants to perform tasks. Robust changes in such resting state networks (RSNs) have been observed in neurologic disorders, and rs-fMRI outcome measures are candidate biomarkers for monitoring clinical trials, including trials of extended therapeutic interventions for rehabilitation of patients with chronic conditions. In this study, we aim to present a unique longitudinal dataset reporting on a healthy adult subject scanned weekly over 3.5 years and identify rs-fMRI outcome measures appropriate for clinical trials. Accordingly, we assessed the reproducibility, and characterized the temporal structure of, rs-fMRI outcome measures derived using independent component analysis (ICA). Data was compared to a 21-person dataset acquired on the same scanner in order to confirm that the values of the single-subject RSN measures were within the expected range as assessed from the multi-participant dataset. Fourteen RSNs were identified, and the inter-session reproducibility of outcome measures—network spatial map, temporal signal fluctuation magnitude, and between-network connectivity (BNC)–was high, with executive RSNs showing the highest reproducibility. Analysis of the weekly outcome measures also showed that many rs-fMRI outcome measures had a significant linear trend, annual periodicity, and persistence. Such temporal structure was most prominent in spatial map similarity, and least prominent in BNC. High reproducibility supports the candidacy of rs-fMRI outcome measures as biomarkers, but the presence of significant temporal structure needs to be taken into account when such outcome measures are considered as biomarkers for rehabilitation-style therapeutic interventions in chronic conditions.

Suggested Citation

  • Ann S Choe & Craig K Jones & Suresh E Joel & John Muschelli & Visar Belegu & Brian S Caffo & Martin A Lindquist & Peter C M van Zijl & James J Pekar, 2015. "Reproducibility and Temporal Structure in Weekly Resting-State fMRI over a Period of 3.5 Years," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(10), pages 1-29, October.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0140134
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140134
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