Abstract

Functional magnetic resonance images (fMRI) acquired using echo planar sequences typically suffer from spatial distortions due to susceptibility induced off-resonance fields, which may cause geometric mismatch with structural images and affect subsequent quantification and localization of brain function. State-of-the art distortion correction methods (for example, using FSL's topup or AFNI's 3dQwarp algorithms) require the collection of additional scans - either field maps or images with reverse phase encoding directions (i.e., blip-up/blip-down acquisitions) - to estimate and correct distortions. However, not all imaging protocols acquire these additional data and thus cannot take advantage of these post-acquisition corrections. In this study, we aim to enable state-of-the art processing of historical or limited datasets that do not include specific sequences for distortion correction by using only the acquired functional data and a single commonly acquired structural image. To achieve this, we synthesize an undistorted image with contrast similar to the fMRI data and use the non-distorted synthetic image as an anatomical target for distortion correction. We evaluate the efficacy of this approach, named SynBOLD-DisCo (Synthetic BOLD contrast for Distortion Correction), and show that this distortion correction process yields fMRI data that are geometrically similar to non-distorted structural images, with distortion correction virtually equivalent to acquisitions that do contain both blip-up/blip-down images. Our method is available as a Singularity container, source code, and an executable trained model to facilitate evaluation and integration into existing fMRI preprocessing pipelines.

Full Text
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