Frontiers in Neuroimaging (Jan 2023)

Estimating and mitigating the effects of systemic low frequency oscillations (sLFO) on resting state networks in awake non-human primates using time lag dependent methodology

  • Lei Cao,
  • Lei Cao,
  • Stephen J. Kohut,
  • Stephen J. Kohut,
  • Stephen J. Kohut,
  • Blaise deB. Frederick,
  • Blaise deB. Frederick,
  • Blaise deB. Frederick

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnimg.2022.1031991
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 1

Abstract

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AimResting-state fMRI (rs-fMRI) is often used to infer regional brain interactions from the degree of temporal correlation between spontaneous low-frequency fluctuations, thought to reflect local changes in the BOLD signal due to neuronal activity. One complication in the analysis and interpretation of rs-fMRI data is the existence of non-neuronal low frequency physiological noise (systemic low frequency oscillations; sLFOs) which occurs within the same low frequency band as the signal used to compute functional connectivity. Here, we demonstrate the use of a time lag mapping technique to estimate and mitigate the effects of the sLFO signal on resting state functional connectivity of awake squirrel monkeys.MethodsTwelve squirrel monkeys (6 male/6 female) were acclimated to awake scanning procedures; whole-brain fMRI images were acquired with a 9.4 Tesla scanner. Rs-fMRI data was preprocessed using an in-house pipeline and sLFOs were detected using a seed regressor generated by averaging BOLD signal across all voxels in the brain, which was then refined recursively within a time window of −16–12 s. The refined regressor was then used to estimate the voxel-wise sLFOs; these regressors were subsequently included in the general linear model to remove these moving hemodynamic components from the rs-fMRI data using general linear model filtering. Group level independent component analysis (ICA) with dual regression was used to detect resting-state networks and compare networks before and after sLFO denoising.ResultsResults show sLFOs constitute ~64% of the low frequency fMRI signal in squirrel monkey gray matter; they arrive earlier in regions in proximity to the middle cerebral arteries (e.g., somatosensory cortex) and later in regions close to draining vessels (e.g., cerebellum). Dual regression results showed that the physiological noise was significantly reduced after removing sLFOs and the extent of reduction was determined by the brain region contained in the resting-state network.ConclusionThese results highlight the need to estimate and remove sLFOs from fMRI data before further analysis.

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