TY - JOUR
T1 - A probabilistic approach to discovering dynamic full-brain functional connectivity patterns
AU - Manning, Jeremy R.
AU - Zhu, Xia
AU - Willke, Theodore L.
AU - Ranganath, Rajesh
AU - Stachenfeld, Kimberly
AU - Hasson, Uri
AU - Blei, David M.
AU - Norman, Kenneth A.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Inc.
PY - 2018/10/15
Y1 - 2018/10/15
N2 - Recent research shows that the covariance structure of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data – commonly described as functional connectivity – can change as a function of the participant's cognitive state (for review see Turk-Browne, 2013). Here we present a Bayesian hierarchical matrix factorization model, termed hierarchical topographic factor analysis (HTFA), for efficiently discovering full-brain networks in large multi-subject neuroimaging datasets. HTFA approximates each subject's network by first re-representing each brain image in terms of the activities of a set of localized nodes, and then computing the covariance of the activity time series of these nodes. The number of nodes, along with their locations, sizes, and activities (over time) are learned from the data. Because the number of nodes is typically substantially smaller than the number of fMRI voxels, HTFA can be orders of magnitude more efficient than traditional voxel-based functional connectivity approaches. In one case study, we show that HTFA recovers the known connectivity patterns underlying a collection of synthetic datasets. In a second case study, we illustrate how HTFA may be used to discover dynamic full-brain activity and connectivity patterns in real fMRI data, collected as participants listened to a story. In a third case study, we carried out a similar series of analyses on fMRI data collected as participants viewed an episode of a television show. In these latter case studies, we found that the HTFA-derived activity and connectivity patterns can be used to reliably decode which moments in the story or show the participants were experiencing. Further, we found that these two classes of patterns contained partially non-overlapping information, such that decoders trained on combinations of activity-based and dynamic connectivity-based features performed better than decoders trained on activity or connectivity patterns alone. We replicated this latter result with two additional (previously developed) methods for efficiently characterizing full-brain activity and connectivity patterns.
AB - Recent research shows that the covariance structure of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data – commonly described as functional connectivity – can change as a function of the participant's cognitive state (for review see Turk-Browne, 2013). Here we present a Bayesian hierarchical matrix factorization model, termed hierarchical topographic factor analysis (HTFA), for efficiently discovering full-brain networks in large multi-subject neuroimaging datasets. HTFA approximates each subject's network by first re-representing each brain image in terms of the activities of a set of localized nodes, and then computing the covariance of the activity time series of these nodes. The number of nodes, along with their locations, sizes, and activities (over time) are learned from the data. Because the number of nodes is typically substantially smaller than the number of fMRI voxels, HTFA can be orders of magnitude more efficient than traditional voxel-based functional connectivity approaches. In one case study, we show that HTFA recovers the known connectivity patterns underlying a collection of synthetic datasets. In a second case study, we illustrate how HTFA may be used to discover dynamic full-brain activity and connectivity patterns in real fMRI data, collected as participants listened to a story. In a third case study, we carried out a similar series of analyses on fMRI data collected as participants viewed an episode of a television show. In these latter case studies, we found that the HTFA-derived activity and connectivity patterns can be used to reliably decode which moments in the story or show the participants were experiencing. Further, we found that these two classes of patterns contained partially non-overlapping information, such that decoders trained on combinations of activity-based and dynamic connectivity-based features performed better than decoders trained on activity or connectivity patterns alone. We replicated this latter result with two additional (previously developed) methods for efficiently characterizing full-brain activity and connectivity patterns.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.01.071
DO - 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.01.071
M3 - Review article
C2 - 29448074
AN - SCOPUS:85042125731
SN - 1053-8119
VL - 180
SP - 243
EP - 252
JO - Neuroimage
JF - Neuroimage
ER -