4.0 Article

MR-Compatible Device for Monitoring Hand Tracing and Writing Tasks in fMRI With an Application to Healthy Subjects

Journal

CONCEPTS IN MAGNETIC RESONANCE PART A
Volume 36A, Issue 3, Pages 139-152

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/cmr.a.20158

Keywords

functional MRI; behavioral task monitoring; optoelectronic devices; Laplacian of Gaussian; blob detection

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Monitoring devices enable control of the correct execution of a given task during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) acquisitions and analysis of behavioral features that can influence brain activation patterns In this report, we describe and validate a low-cost device for monitoring hand tracing and writing tasks during fMRI The subject holds a light-emitting pen whose light spot is recorded by a fixed camera aligned with the tracing plane Pen trajectories are extracted by a blob detection algorithm through Laplacian of Gaussian filtering applied to the camera recordings Following phantom and in vivo experiments which demonstrated MR compatibility, the device was applied to monitor the particular case of the task of continuous and self-paced writing of an '8' figure in 10 healthy subjects They underwent fMRI examinations during the task under three conditions spontaneous frequency and figure size, 'low' frequency and 'small' figure size The task recordings were analyzed with a dedicated algorithm that computed both frequency and area of the figures '8' writing The device was judged comfortable by all subjects fMRI data analysis showed that task frequency influenced the activation within primary sensory motor and premotor frontal cortices, while figure size interfered with the activation in posterior parietal cortex Both frequency and size parameters modulated activation in the inferior cerebellum By monitoring writing-tasks executions, this device is expected to broaden the spectrum of applications of fMRI Indeed, it could allow the investigation of patients suffering from neurological disorders affecting handwriting, such as apraxic disorders, cerebellar disorders, or parkinsonisms (C) 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc Concepts Magn Reson Part A 36A 139-152, 2010

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