4.7 Article

The Neuro/PsyGRID Calibration Experiment: Identifying Sources of Variance and Bias in Multicenter MRI Studies

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 33, Issue 2, Pages 373-386

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.21210

Keywords

magnetic resonance imaging; multicentre; variance components; rank test

Funding

  1. Medical Research Council e-Science initiatives: PsyGrid [G0300610]
  2. NeuroGrid [G0300623]
  3. NeuroPsyGrid [G0601652]
  4. Medical Research Council [G0001354B, 1097247, G0001354, G1000183B, G0300610, G0601652, G0300623] Funding Source: researchfish
  5. National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0611-10150] Funding Source: researchfish
  6. MRC [G0300623, G0601652, G0300610] Funding Source: UKRI

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Calibration experiments precede multicenter trials to identify potential sources of variance and bias. In support of future imaging studies of mental health disorders and their treatment, the Neuro/PsyGRID consortium commissioned a calibration experiment to acquire functional and structural MRI from twelve healthy volunteers attending five centers on two occasions. Measures were derived of task activation from a working memory paradigm, fractal scaling (Hurst exponent) from resting fMRI, and grey matter distributions from T1-weighted sequences. At each intracerebral voxel a fixed-effects analysis of variance estimated components of variance corresponding to factors of center, subject, occasion, and within-occasion order, and interactions of center-by-occasion, subject-by-occasion, and center-by-subject, the latter (since there is no intervention) a surrogate of the expected variance of the treatment effect standard error across centers. A rank order test of between-center differences was indicative of crossover or noncrossover subject-by-center interactions. In general, factors of center, subject and error variance constituted >90% of the total variance, whereas occasion, order, and all interactions were generally <5%. Subject was the primary source of variance (70%80%) for grey-matter, with error variance the dominant component for fMRI-derived measures. Spatially, variance was broadly homogenous with the exception of fractal scaling measures which delineated white matter, related to the flip angle of the EPI sequence. Maps of P values for the associated F-tests were also derived. Rank tests were highly significant indicating the order of measures across centers was preserved. In summary, center effects should be modeled at the voxel-level using existing and long-standing statistical recommendations. Hum Brain Mapp, 2012. (C) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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