4.7 Article

Individualized cognitive neuroscience needs 7T: Comparing numerosity maps at 3T and 7T MRI

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 237, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118184

Keywords

Ultra-high field; BOLD; Numerosity map; Computational model; Cognitive neuroscience

Funding

  1. Ammodo KNAW Award
  2. NWO-VICI grant [016.Vici.185.050]
  3. KNAW research grant
  4. China Scholarship Council (CSC) scholarship [201706750008]

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The study compared a computational cognitive neuroscience paradigm at 3T and 7T, finding that 7T scans had greater model predictive power and required fewer functional runs to reconstruct numerosity maps. The higher signal-to-noise ratio and sensitivity of UHF MRI is suggested as necessary for building mechanistic models and studying cognitive abilities in individual participants.
The field of cognitive neuroscience is weighing evidence about whether to move from the current standard field strength of 3 Tesla (3T) to ultra-high field (UHF) of 7T and above. The present study contributes to the evidence by comparing a computational cognitive neuroscience paradigm at 3T and 7T. The goal was to evaluate the practical effects, i.e. model predictive power, of field strength on a numerosity task using accessible pre-processing and analysis tools. Previously, using 7T functional magnetic resonance imaging and biologically-inspired analyses, i.e. population receptive field modelling, we discovered topographical organization of numerosity-selective neural populations in human parietal cortex. Here we show that these topographic maps are also detectable at 3T. However, averaging of many more functional runs was required at 3T to reliably reconstruct numerosity maps. On average, one 7T run had about four times the model predictive power of one 3T run. We believe that this amount of scanning would have made the initial discovery of the numerosity maps on 3T highly infeasible in practice. Therefore, we suggest that the higher signal-to-noise ratio and signal sensitivity of UHF MRI is necessary to build mechanistic models of the organization and function of our cognitive abilities in individual participants.

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