Abstract

PurposeTo computationally separate dynamic brain functional BOLD responses from static background in a brain functional activity for forward fMRI signal analysis and inverse mapping.MethodsA brain functional activity is represented in terms of magnetic source by a perturbation model: χ = χ0 +δχ, with δχ for BOLD magnetic perturbations and χ0 for background. A brain fMRI experiment produces a timeseries of complex-valued images (T2* images), whereby we extract the BOLD phase signals (denoted by δP) by a complex division. By solving an inverse problem, we reconstruct the BOLD δχ dataset from the δP dataset, and the brain χ distribution from a (unwrapped) T2* phase image. Given a 4D dataset of task BOLD fMRI, we implement brain functional mapping by temporal correlation analysis.ResultsThrough a high-field (7T) and high-resolution (0.5mm in plane) task fMRI experiment, we demonstrated in detail the BOLD perturbation model for fMRI phase signal separation (P + δP) and reconstructing intrinsic brain magnetic source (χ and δχ). We also provided to a low-field (3T) and low-resolution (2mm) task fMRI experiment in support of single-subject fMRI study. Our experiments show that the δχ-depicted functional map reveals bidirectional BOLD χ perturbations during the task performance.ConclusionsThe BOLD perturbation model allows us to separate fMRI phase signal (by complex division) and to perform inverse mapping for pure BOLD δχ reconstruction for intrinsic functional χ mapping. The full brain χ reconstruction (from unwrapped fMRI phase) provides a new brain tissue image that allows to scrutinize the brain tissue idiosyncrasy for the pure BOLD δχ response through an automatic function/structure co-localization.

Highlights

  • The blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal [1,2,3,4] has been widely leveraged for neuroimaging studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging

  • Through a high-field (7T) and high-resolution (0.5mm in plane) task functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment, we demonstrated in detail the BOLD perturbation model for fMRI phase signal separation (P + δP) and reconstructing intrinsic brain magnetic source (χ and δχ)

  • Our experiments show that the δχ-depicted functional map reveals bidirectional BOLD χ perturbations during the task performance

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Summary

Introduction

The blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signal [1,2,3,4] has been widely leveraged for neuroimaging studies using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We depict the brain functional map from the 4D T2Ã magnitude dataset, while discarding the 4D T2Ã phase dataset. The T2Ã phase conveys information concerning brain magnetic state that is different from the T2Ã magnitude [5,6]. The inverse mapping for brain magnetic source reconstruction can only be achieved via T2Ã phase rather than T2Ã magnitude [7,8,9,10]. The inverse mapping for BOLD fMRI seeks the dynamic BOLD magnetic source from the timeseries of T2Ã phase images [8]

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