Ultra-slow oscillations in fMRI and resting-state connectivity: Neuronal and vascular contributions and technical confounds
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http://datadryad.org/dataset/doi%253A10.5061%252Fdryad.4xgxd2589
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Ultra-slow, ~0.1-Hz variations in the oxygenation level of brain blood are widely used as an fMRI-based surrogate of ‘‘resting-state’’ neuronal activity. The temporal correlations among these fluctuations across the brain are interpreted as ‘‘functional connections’’ for maps and neurological diagnostics. Ultra-slow variations in oxygenation follow a cascade. First, they closely track changes in arteriole diameter. Second, interpretable functional connections arise when the ultra-slow changes in amplitude of g-band neuronal oscillations, which are shared across even far-flung but synaptically connected brain regions, entrain the ~0.1-Hz vasomotor oscillation in diameter of local arterioles. Significant confounds to estimates of functional connectivity arise from residual vasomotor activity as well as arteriole dynamics driven by self-generated movements and subcortical common modulatory inputs. Last, methodological limitations of fMRI can lead to spurious functional connections. The neuronal generator of ultra-slow variations in gamma-band amplitude, including that associated with self-generated movements, remains an open issue.
创建时间:
2021-03-03



