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Introduction / Overview: Maria Joao Rosa and Antoinette Nicolle Wellcome Trust Centre For Neuroimaging, UCL

This document provides an overview and schedule for the Methods for Dummies (MfD) 2009 program, which aims to introduce basic human brain imaging analysis methods such as fMRI, EEG, and MEG through a series of weekly seminars covering topics like statistics, study design, preprocessing, analysis, and connectivity. It also provides resources for presenters, contact information for experts, and guidance on getting started with experiments and scanning.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
98 views

Introduction / Overview: Maria Joao Rosa and Antoinette Nicolle Wellcome Trust Centre For Neuroimaging, UCL

This document provides an overview and schedule for the Methods for Dummies (MfD) 2009 program, which aims to introduce basic human brain imaging analysis methods such as fMRI, EEG, and MEG through a series of weekly seminars covering topics like statistics, study design, preprocessing, analysis, and connectivity. It also provides resources for presenters, contact information for experts, and guidance on getting started with experiments and scanning.

Uploaded by

Enamuldu
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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2009

Introduction / Overview
15th October 2009

Maria Joao Rosa and Antoinette Nicolle


Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging, UCL
Overview
• Introduction
• What’s MfD

• Programme for 2009

• How to prepare your presentation

• Where to find information and help

• Experts

• Overview for dummies

Introduction to MfD 2009


Methods for Dummies 2009
Aim: to give a basic introduction to human brain imaging analysis methods,
focusing on fMRI and M/EEG

Wednesdays / 13h00 – 14h00 / FIL Seminar Room

Areas covered in MfD


• Basic Statistics

• fMRI (BOLD)
• EEG / MEG
• Connectivity
• VBM

Introduction to MfD 2009


PROGRAMME 2009
Autumn

Introduction to MfD 2009


I. Basic Statistics
21st Oct – 18th Nov
• Linear Algebra & Matrices (Elvina Chu and Flavia Mancini)
• T-tests, ANOVA’s & Regression (Carles Falcon and Suz Prejawa)
• General Linear Model (Catherine Tur and Ashawin Jha)
• Bayes for beginners (Raphael Kaplan and Jason Stretton)
• Random Field Theory (Friederike Schuur and Anne-Lise Goddings)

Introduction to MfD 2009


II. What are we measuring?
25th Nov – 2nd Dec
• Basis of the BOLD signal (Miriam Klein and Ciara O’Mahony)

• Basis of the M/EEG signal (Jordi Costa Faidella and Tal Machover)

Introduction to MfD 2009


III. fMRI Analysis
9th Dec – 16th Dec

• Preprocessing:
– Realigning and un-warping (Idalmis Santusteban and Rebecca Knight)
– Co-registration & spatial normalisation (Ana Csaraiva and Britt Hoffland)

Continues after Christmas break…

Introduction to MfD 2009


PROGRAMME 2009
Spring 2010

Introduction to MfD 2009


III. fMRI Analysis (cont.)
13th Jan – 3rd Feb
• Study design and efficiency (Heidi Bonnici and Sinead Mullally)

• 1st level analysis – Design matrix contrasts and inference (Loreili Howard and
Rumana Chowdury)

• 1st level analysis – Basis functions, parametric modulation and correlated


regressors (Crystal Goh and one other)

• 2nd level analysis – between-subject analysis (Jennifer Marchant and Tessa


Dekker)

Introduction to MfD 2009


IV. EEG & MEG
10th Feb – 17th Feb

• Pre-processing and experimental design (Thomas Ditye and Lena Kaestner)


• Contrasts, inference and source localisation (Diana Omigie and Stjepana Kovac)

Introduction to MfD 2009


V. Connectivity
24th Feb – 10th March

• Intro to connectivity - PPI & SEM (Melissa Stockbridge and Dean Dsouza)
• DCM for fMRI – theory & practice (Marie-Helene Boudrais and Jorge Ivan
Castillo-Quan)

• DCM for ERP / ERF – theory & practice (Flavia Cardini and Darren
McGuinness)

Introduction to MfD 2009


VI. Structural MRI Analysis
17th March

• Voxel Based Morphometry (Nikos Gorgoraptis and one other)

Introduction to MfD 2009


How to prepare your presentation
Very important!!!: Read the Presenter’s guide
(available on the website)

• Remember your audience are not experts…


• The aim of the sessions is to
– introduce the concepts and explain why they are important to imaging
analysis
– familiarise people with the basic theory and standard methods
• Time: 45min. + 15min. questions – 2 presenters per session
• Don’t just copy last year’s slides!!!...
• Start preparing your talk with your co-presenter at least 2 weeks in advance
• Talk to the allocated expert 1 week in advance

Introduction to MfD 2009


What if I can’t make my presentation?

• If you want to change / swap your topic, try and find


someone else to swap with….

• …if you still can’t find a solution, then get in touch with
Maria or Antoinette as soon as possible (at least 3 weeks
before the talk).

Introduction to MfD 2009


Where to find help
MfD Home Resources
http://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/mfd/page2/page2.html

• Key papers
• Previous years’ slides
• Human Brain Function Textbook (online)
• SPM course slides
• Cambridge CBU homepage (Rik Henson’s slides)

• Methods Group Experts


• Monday Methods Meetings (4th floor FIL, 12.30)
• SPM email List

Introduction to MfD 2009


Experts
• Will Penny – Head of Methods
• John Ashburner
• Jean Daunizeau
• Guillaume Flandin Contact the expert: discuss presentation
• James Kilner and other issues (1 week before talk)
• Rosalyn Moran
• Andre Marreiros Expert will be present in the session
• Vladimir Litvak
• Chloe Hutton
• Maria Joao Rosa
• Antoinette Nicolle

Introduction to MfD 2009


Website
http://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/mfd/
Where you can find
all the information about MfD 2009:
Programme
Contacts
Presenter’s guide
Resources (Help)
Etc…

Introduction to MfD 2009


Other helpful courses
• Matlab for Cognitive Neuroscience (ICN)
– Run by Christian Ruff
– http://www.icn.ucl.ac.uk/courses/MATLAB-Tutorials/index.htm
– 4.30 pm, Thursday (not every week!)
– 17 Queen Square, basement seminar room

• Physics lecture series


– Run by FIL physics team
– Details will be announced
– 12 Queen Square, Seminar room

Introduction to MfD 2009


Overview for Dummies

Introduction to MfD 2009


Outline

• SPM & your (fMRI) data


– Preprocessing
– Analysis
– Connectivity

• Getting started with an experiment

• Acronyms

Introduction to MfD 2009


Pre-processing
Preprocessing Possibilities…
• These steps basically get your imaging data to a state where you
can start your analysis

– Realignment & Unwarping

– Segmentation and Normalisation

– Smoothing
Model specification and estimation
Analysis
• Once you have carried out your pre-processing you can specify your design
and data
– The design matrix is simply a mathematical description of your experiment
E.g. ‘visual stimulus on = 1’ ‘visual stimulus off = 0’

Design matrix

General Linear Model


Inference
Contrasts & inference
• Contrasts allow us to test hypotheses about our data, using t & f
tests
• 1st level analysis: activation over scans (within subject)
• 2nd level analysis: activation over subjects

• Multiple Comparison Problem – Random Field Theory

SPM
Write up and publish…
Brain connectivity

Causal interactions between brain areas, statistical dependencies

• Functional integration – how one region influences another…


subdivided into:
– Functional connectivity: correlations among brain systems (e.g.
principal component analysis)
– Effective connectivity: the influence of one region over another
(e.g. psycho-physiological interactions, or Dynamic Causal
Modelling)
Statistical Parametric Mapping
• MfD 2009 will focus on the use of SPM8
• SPM software has been designed for the analysis of brain imaging
data in fMRI, PET, SPECT, EEG & MEG
• It runs in Matlab… just type SPM at the prompt and all will be
revealed.
• There are sample data sets available on the SPM website to play
with
Getting started – Cogent
• http://www.vislab.ucl.ac.uk/Cogent/
– present scanner-synchronized visual stimuli, auditory stimuli,
mechanical stimuli, taste and smell stimuli

– monitor key presses

– physiological recordings

– logging stimulus & scan onset times

• Try and get hold of one to modify rather than starting from scratch!
People are more than happy to share scripts around.

• If you need help, talk to Eric Featherstone.

Introduction to MfD 2009


Getting started - Setting up your experiment
If you need…
• special equipment
– Peter Aston
– Physics team
• special scanning sequences
– Physics team

• They are very happy to help, but contact them in time!

Introduction to MfD 2009


Getting started - scanning decisions to be made
• What are your scanning parameters:
– how many conditions/sessions/blocks
– Interstimulus interval
– Scanning sequence
– Scanning angle
– How much brain coverage do you need
• how many slices
• what slice thickness
– what TR

• Use the physics wiki page:


http://cast.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/pmwiki/pmwiki.php

Introduction to MfD 2009


Summary
• Get you script ready & working with the scanner
• Make sure it logs all the data you need for your analysis
• Back up your data from the stimulus PC! You can transfer it via the
network after each scanning session…
• Get a scanning buddy if it’s your first scanning study
• Provide the radiographers with tea, biscuits, chocolate etc.

Introduction to MfD 2009


Use the project presentations!

They are there to help you design a project that will get you
data that can actually be analyzed in a meaningful way

Introduction to MfD 2009


Acronyms

• DCM – dynamic causal model • PCA – principal component analysis


• DTI – diffusion tensor imaging • PEB – parametric empirical bayes
• FDR – false discovery rate • PPI – psychophysiological interaction
• FFX – fixed effects analysis • PPM – posterior probability map
• FIR – finite impulse response • ReML – restricted maximum likelihood
• FWE – family wise error • RFT– random field theory
• FWHM – full width half maximum • RFX – random effects analysis
• GLM – general linear model • ROI – region of interest
• GRF – gaussian random field theory • SOA – stimulus onset asynchrony
• HRF – haemodynamic response • SPM – statistical parametric mapping
function • VBM – voxel-based morphometry
• ICA – independent component
analysis
• ISI – interstimulus interval

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