4.7 Article

Influence of sample size and analytic approach on stability and interpretation of brain-behavior correlations in task-relatedfMRIdata

期刊

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
卷 42, 期 1, 页码 204-219

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25217

关键词

correlations; fMRI; RRID; SCR_001622; RRID; SCR_001847; RRID; SCR_002823; RRID; SCR_005990; RRID; SCR_007037; RRID; SCR_008750; sample size; statistical power; working memory

资金

  1. Canada Research Chairs
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [MOP143311]
  3. National Institutes of Health [1U54MH091657, R00 AG-036848, R00 AG-036818, R01 AG-056535]

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The study highlights the problem of limited statistical power in fMRI research due to small sample sizes. Experiment results indicate that larger sample sizes lead to decreased brain-behavior correlations and increased similarity across spatial maps. Furthermore, the multivariate approach shows advantages in the stability of brain-behavior correlations compared to univariate methods.
Limited statistical power due to small sample sizes is a problem in fMRI research. Most of the work to date has examined the impact of sample size on task-related activation, with less attention paid to the influence of sample size on brain-behavior correlations, especially in actual experimental fMRI data. We addressed this issue using two large data sets (a working memory task,N= 171, and a relational processing task,N= 865) and both univariate and multivariate approaches to voxel-wise correlations. We created subsamples of different sizes and calculated correlations between task-related activity at each voxel and task performance. Across both data sets the magnitude of the brain-behavior correlations decreased and similarity across spatial maps increased with larger sample sizes. The multivariate technique identified more extensive correlated areas and more similarity across spatial maps, suggesting that a multivariate approach would provide a consistent advantage over univariate approaches in the stability of brain-behavior correlations. In addition, the multivariate analyses showed that a sample size of roughly 80 or more participants would be needed for stable estimates of correlation magnitude in these data sets. Importantly, a number of additional factors would likely influence the choice of sample size for assessing such correlations in any given experiment, including the cognitive task of interest and the amount of data collected per participant. Our results provide novel experimental evidence in two independent data sets that the sample size commonly used in fMRI studies of 20-30 participants is very unlikely to be sufficient for obtaining reproducible brain-behavior correlations, regardless of analytic approach.

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