Abstract

We recently described a motion-related artifact in resting state functional connectivity MRI (rs-fcMRI) data that arises from subject head motion (Power et al. (2012), see also Satterthwaite et al. (2012); Van Dijk et al. (2012)). Head motion produces well-known disruptions in BOLD signal (Friston et al., 1996), and these artifactual modulations of BOLD signal, which are similar at nearby voxels, create spurious patterns in correlations in rs-fcMRI. Specifically, head motion augments short-distance correlations and weakens long-distance correlations. Thus, for instance, a higher-motion dataset would typically display weakened correlations between (distantly spaced) default mode regions but enhanced correlations between (closely spaced) visual regions in comparison to a low-motion data-set. We described this artifact in cohorts of children, adolescents, and adults, and its severity (magnitude) was related to the prevalence of motion within a cohort. Motion-related functional connectivity artifact is thus a substantial confound in the examination of single rs-fcMRI datasets and in comparisons of multiple rs-fcMRI datasets.

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