4.7 Article

Evaluation of a personalized functional near infra-red optical tomography workflow using maximum entropy on the mean

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 42, Issue 15, Pages 4823-4843

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25566

Keywords

finger tapping; functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI); functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS); maximum entropy on the mean (MEM); near infra-red optical tomography (NIROT); personalized optimal montage

Funding

  1. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [CIHRMOP 133619]
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Nature et Technologies
  4. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec - Sante
  5. Horizon Postdoctoral Fellowships of Concordia University
  6. McGill/MNI - Fred Andermann EEG and Epilepsy Fellowship
  7. Natural Sciences and Engineering ResearchCouncil of Canada
  8. PERFORM Graduate Scholarship in Preventive Health Research
  9. Savoy Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowships
  10. Strauss Canada Foundation

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In this study, a personalized NIROT workflow using fNIRS for spatiotemporal imaging of cortical hemodynamic fluctuations was proposed and evaluated. The MEM framework showed better spatial accuracy compared to the MNE method, while both methods exhibited similar temporal accuracy in reconstructing concentration changes of HbO and HbR. The complete workflow was made available for further application in the brainstorm fNIRS processing plugin-NIRSTORM.
In the present study, we proposed and evaluated a workflow of personalized near infra-red optical tomography (NIROT) using functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) for spatiotemporal imaging of cortical hemodynamic fluctuations. The proposed workflow from fNIRS data acquisition to local 3D reconstruction consists of: (a) the personalized optimal montage maximizing fNIRS channel sensitivity to a predefined targeted brain region; (b) the optimized fNIRS data acquisition involving installation of optodes and digitalization of their positions using a neuronavigation system; and (c) the 3D local reconstruction using maximum entropy on the mean (MEM) to accurately estimate the location and spatial extent of fNIRS hemodynamic fluctuations along the cortical surface. The workflow was evaluated on finger-tapping fNIRS data acquired from 10 healthy subjects for whom we estimated the reconstructed NIROT spatiotemporal images and compared with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) results from the same individuals. Using the fMRI activation maps as our reference, we quantitatively compared the performance of two NIROT approaches, the MEM framework and the conventional minimum norm estimation (MNE) method. Quantitative comparisons were performed at both single subject and group-level. Overall, our results suggested that MEM provided better spatial accuracy than MNE, while both methods offered similar temporal accuracy when reconstructing oxygenated (HbO) and deoxygenated hemoglobin (HbR) concentration changes evoked by finger-tapping. Our proposed complete workflow was made available in the brainstorm fNIRS processing plugin-NIRSTORM, thus providing the opportunity for other researchers to further apply it to other tasks and on larger populations.

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