4.8 Article

Lowering the thermal noise barrier in functional brain mapping with magnetic resonance imaging

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25431-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [U01EB025144, P41 EB027061, P30 NS076408, RF1 MH116978, RF1 MH117015]
  2. NSF [CAREER CCF-1651825]

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The study introduces a denoising technique that improves key metrics of fMRI experiments while leaving other parameters unchanged. This method enables the acquisition of ultrahigh resolution functional maps and is beneficial for a variety of fMRI applications.
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has become an indispensable tool for investigating the human brain. However, the inherently poor signal-to-noise-ratio (SNR) of the fMRI measurement represents a major barrier to expanding its spatiotemporal scale as well as its utility and ultimate impact. Here we introduce a denoising technique that selectively suppresses the thermal noise contribution to the fMRI experiment. Using 7-Tesla, high-resolution human brain data, we demonstrate improvements in key metrics of functional mapping (temporal-SNR, the detection and reproducibility of stimulus-induced signal changes, and accuracy of functional maps) while leaving the amplitude of the stimulus-induced signal changes, spatial precision, and functional point-spread-function unaltered. We demonstrate that the method enables the acquisition of ultrahigh resolution (0.5mm isotropic) functional maps but is also equally beneficial for a large variety of fMRI applications, including supra-millimeter resolution 3- and 7-Tesla data obtained over different cortical regions with different stimulation/task paradigms and acquisition strategies.

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