4.3 Article

DPABI: Data Processing & Analysis for (Resting-State) Brain Imaging

Journal

NEUROINFORMATICS
Volume 14, Issue 3, Pages 339-351

Publisher

HUMANA PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1007/s12021-016-9299-4

Keywords

Data processing; Quality control; Resting-state fMRI; Standardization; Statistical analysis

Funding

  1. National Basic Research (973) Program [2015CB351702]
  2. Hundred Talents Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [Y5CX072006, Y2CS112006]
  3. Beijing Municipal Science & Technology Commission
  4. CAS K.C. Wong Education Foundation
  5. Qian Jiang Distinguished Professor program

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Brain imaging efforts are being increasingly devoted to decode the functioning of the human brain. Among neuroimaging techniques, resting-state fMRI (R-fMRI) is currently expanding exponentially. Beyond the general neuroimaging analysis packages (e.g., SPM, AFNI and FSL), REST and DPARSF were developed to meet the increasing need of user-friendly toolboxes for R-fMRI data processing. To address recently identified methodological challenges of R-fMRI, we introduce the newly developed toolbox, DPABI, which was evolved from REST and DPARSF. DPABI incorporates recent research advances on head motion control and measurement standardization, thus allowing users to evaluate results using stringent control strategies. DPABI also emphasizes test-retest reliability and quality control of data processing. Furthermore, DPABI provides a user-friendly pipeline analysis toolkit for rat/monkey R-fMRI data analysis to reflect the rapid advances in animal imaging. In addition, DPABI includes preprocessing modules for task-based fMRI, voxel-based morphometry analysis, statistical analysis and results viewing. DPABI is designed to make data analysis require fewer manual operations, be less time-consuming, have a lower skill requirement, a smaller risk of inadvertent mistakes, and be more comparable across studies. We anticipate this open-source toolbox will assist novices and expert users alike and continue to support advancing R-fMRI methodology and its application to clinical translational studies.

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