4.7 Article

Global signal regression strengthens association between resting-state functional connectivity and behavior

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 196, Issue -, Pages 126-141

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.04.016

Keywords

Resting-state functional MRI; Inter-subject variability; Fluid intelligence; Big five personality; Fingerprinting; Human connectome project

Funding

  1. Singapore MOE Tier 2 [MOE2014-T2-2-016]
  2. NUS Strategic Research [DPRT/944/09/14]
  3. NUS SOM Aspiration Fund [R185000271720]
  4. Singapore NMRC [CBRG/0088/2015]
  5. NUS YIA
  6. Singapore National Research Foundation Fellowship (Class of 2017)
  7. NIH [K99AG054573]
  8. Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging at the Massachusetts General Hospital [P41EB015896, 1S10RR023401, 1S10RR019307, 1S10RR023043]
  9. Center for Brain Science Neuroinformatics Research Group
  10. Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging
  11. Center for Human Genetic Research
  12. 16 NIH Institutes and Centers [1U54MH091657]
  13. McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience at Washington University

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Global signal regression (GSR) is one of the most debated preprocessing strategies for resting-state functional MRI. GSR effectively removes global artifacts driven by motion and respiration, but also discards globally distributed neural information and introduces negative correlations between certain brain regions. The vast majority of previous studies have focused on the effectiveness of GSR in removing imaging artifacts, as well as its potential biases. Given the growing interest in functional connectivity fingerprinting, here we considered the utilitarian question of whether GSR strengthens or weakens associations between resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC) and multiple behavioral measures across cognition, personality and emotion. By applying the variance component model to the Brain Genomics Superstruct Project (GSP), we found that behavioral variance explained by whole-brain RSFC increased by an average of 47% across 23 behavioral measures after GSR. In the Human Connectome Project (HCP), we found that behavioral variance explained by whole-brain RSFC increased by an average of 40% across 58 behavioral measures, when GSR was applied after ICA-FIX de-noising. To ensure generalizability, we repeated our analyses using kernel regression. GSR improved behavioral prediction accuracies by an average of 64% and 12% in the GSP and HCP datasets respectively. Importantly, the results were consistent across methods. A behavioral measure with greater RSFC-explained variance (using the variance component model) also exhibited greater prediction accuracy (using kernel regression). A behavioral measure with greater improvement in behavioral variance explained after GSR (using the variance component model) also enjoyed greater improvement in prediction accuracy after GSR (using kernel regression). Furthermore, GSR appeared to benefit task performance measures more than self-reported measures. Since GSR was more effective at removing motion-related and respiratory-related artifacts, GSR-related increases in variance explained and prediction accuracies were unlikely the result of motion-related or respiratory-related artifacts. However, it is worth emphasizing that the current study focused on whole-brain RSFC, so it remains unclear whether GSR improves RSFC-behavioral associations for specific connections or networks. Overall, our results suggest that at least in the case for young healthy adults, GSR strengthens the associations between RSFC and most (although not all) behavioral measures. Code for the variance component model and ridge regression can be found here: nttps://github.com/ThomasYeoLab/CBIG/tree/master/stable_projects/preprocessing/Li2019_GSR.

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