Journal article

Does motion-related brain functional connectivity reflect both artifacts and genuine neural activity?

J Pujol, D Macià, L Blanco-Hinojo, G Martínez-Vilavella, J Sunyer, R de la Torre, A Caixàs, R Martín-Santos, J Deus, BJ Harrison

Neuroimage | ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE | Published : 2014

Abstract

Imaging research on functional connectivity is uniquely contributing to characterize the functional organization of the human brain. Functional connectivity measurements, however, may be significantly influenced by head motion that occurs during image acquisition. The identification of how motion influences such measurements is therefore highly relevant to the interpretation of a study's results. We have mapped the effect of head motion on functional connectivity in six different populations representing a wide range of potential influences of motion on functional connectivity. Group-level voxel-wise maps of the correlation between a summary head motion measurement and functional connectivit..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Instituto de Salud Carlos III


Funding Acknowledgements

This study was supported in part by the Spanish Government (grants SAF2010-19434, PI10/00940 and PI11/00744) and the European Community's Seventh Framework Program (ERC-Advanced grant number 268479). The Agency of University and Research Funding Management of the Catalonia Government participated in the context of Research Groups SGR 2009/1450. Ms. Blanco-Hinojo is supported by the PFIS grant FI10/00387 from the Carlos III Health Institute. Dr. Harrison is supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia (NHMRC) Clinical Career Development Award (I.D. 628509).