Publication | Open Access
Fast Joint Detection-Estimation of Evoked Brain Activity in Event-Related fMRI Using a Variational Approach
73
Citations
44
References
2012
Year
Brain MappingSocial SciencesBiostatisticsVariational ApproachNeurologyCognitive ElectrophysiologyIndependent Component AnalysisEvoked Brain ActivityCognitive NeuroscienceStatisticsBayesian Hierarchical ModelingEvent-related FmriNeuroimaging ModalityNeuroimagingMedical Image ComputingBrain ImagingFunctional Data AnalysisNeurophysiologyComputational NeuroscienceIntractable Posterior DistributionMarkovian ModelEeg Signal ProcessingStatistical InferenceNeuroscienceFunctional NeuroimagingMedicineSpatial Information
In standard within-subject analyses of event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data, two steps are usually performed separately: detection of brain activity and estimation of the hemodynamic response. Because these two steps are inherently linked, we adopt the so-called region-based joint detection-estimation (JDE) framework that addresses this joint issue using a multivariate inference for detection and estimation. JDE is built by making use of a regional bilinear generative model of the BOLD response and constraining the parameter estimation by physiological priors using temporal and spatial information in a Markovian model. In contrast to previous works that use Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) techniques to sample the resulting intractable posterior distribution, we recast the JDE into a missing data framework and derive a variational expectation-maximization (VEM) algorithm for its inference. A variational approximation is used to approximate the Markovian model in the unsupervised spatially adaptive JDE inference, which allows automatic fine-tuning of spatial regularization parameters. It provides a new algorithm that exhibits interesting properties in terms of estimation error and computational cost compared to the previously used MCMC-based approach. Experiments on artificial and real data show that VEM-JDE is robust to model misspecification and provides computational gain while maintaining good performance in terms of activation detection and hemodynamic shape recovery.
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