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Seminar: The past and future of Random Field Theory for neuroimaging inference

January 11, 2016 @ 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Speaker name: Prof. Thomas E. Nichols

Abstract: A fundamental goal in “brain mapping” with functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) is localising the parts of the brain activated by a task.  The standard tool for making this inference has been Random Field Theory (RFT), a collection of results for Gaussian Processes of the null statistic image (implemented in the two most widely used packages, SPM & FSL).  RFT provides inference on individual voxels (voxel-wise) and sets of contiguous suprathreshold voxels (cluster-wise) while controlling the familywise error rate, the chance of one or more false positives over the brain.  I will discuss how RFT methods have been used for the past 25 years, show some small-scale evaluations that pointed to problems with RFT when the degrees-of-freedom are low.  I will then show results from a recent study based on the wealth of (1000’s of) publicly available resting-state fMRI datasets; these massive evaluations show that, even with n=20 or 40 subjects, RFT suffers from slightly conservative voxel-wise inferences and catastrophically liberal cluster-wise inferences.  I will discuss the reasons for these failures of RFT and practical solutions going forward.

Seminar Slides from Prof. Nichols’ Talk

Details

Date:
January 11, 2016
Time:
4:00 pm - 5:00 pm

Organizer

Ira Ktena
Email:
ira.ktena@imperial.ac.uk

Venue

Huxley Building, Room 217/218
Imperial College London
London, SW7 2AZ United Kingdom
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