4.7 Article

Which multiband factor should you choose for your resting-state fMRI study?

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 234, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.117965

Keywords

Acceleration; Functional connectivity; Noise amplification; Putamen; Thalamus; Simultaneous multislice; Subcortical; Temporal resolution

Funding

  1. Rollins School of Public Health at Emory University
  2. NIH [R21AG066970, K01MH109766, P50AG025688, R21AG064405]
  3. Center for Systems Imaging Core Pilot Grant at Emory University

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Multiband acquisition is a popular technique in resting-state functional connectivity studies, increasing temporal resolution but also amplifying noise in deeper brain regions. Evaluation of different MB factors and single-band acquisitions suggests that choosing the appropriate acquisition method can improve research efficiency and accuracy.
Multiband acquisition, also called simultaneous multislice, has become a popular technique in resting-state functional connectivity studies. Multiband (MB) acceleration leads to a higher temporal resolution but also leads to spatially heterogeneous noise amplification, suggesting the costs may be greater in areas such as the subcortex. We evaluate MB factors of 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 9, and 12 with 2 mm isotropic voxels, and additionally 2 mm and 3.3 mm single-band acquisitions, on a 32-channel head coil. Noise amplification was greater in deeper brain regions, including subcortical regions. Correlations were attenuated by noise amplification, which resulted in spatially varying biases that were more severe at higher MB factors. Temporal filtering decreased spatial biases in correlations due to noise amplification, but also tended to decrease effect sizes. In seed-based correlation maps, left-right putamen connectivity and thalamo-motor connectivity were highest in the single-band 3.3 mm protocol. In correlation matrices, MB 4, 6, and 8 had a greater number of significant correlations than the other acquisitions (both with and without temporal filtering). We recommend single-band 3.3 mm for seed-based subcortical analyses, and MB 4 provides a reasonable balance for studies analyzing both seed-based correlation maps and connectivity matrices. In multiband studies including secondary analyses of large-scale datasets, we recommend reporting effect sizes or test statistics instead of correlations. If correlations are reported, temporal filtering (or another method for thermal noise removal) should be used. The Emory Multiband Dataset is available on OpenNeuro.

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