How do tasks impact the reliability of fMRI functional connectivity?

Author:

Rai Shefali1234ORCID,Graff Kirk1234,Tansey Ryann1234,Bray Signe1235

Affiliation:

1. Child and Adolescent Imaging Research Program University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

2. Alberta Children's Hospital Research Institute University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

3. Hotchkiss Brain Institute University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

4. Department of Neuroscience University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

5. Department of Radiology University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractWhile there is growing interest in the use of functional magnetic resonance imaging‐functional connectivity (fMRI‐FC) for biomarker research, low measurement reliability of conventional acquisitions may limit applications. Factors known to impact FC reliability include scan length, head motion, signal properties, such as temporal signal‐to‐noise ratio (tSNR), and the acquisition state or task. As tasks impact signal in a region‐wise fashion, they likely impact FC reliability differently across the brain, making task an important decision in study design. Here, we use the densely sampled Midnight Scan Club (MSC) dataset, comprising 5 h of rest and 6 h of task fMRI data in 10 healthy adults, to investigate regional effects of tasks on FC reliability. We further considered how BOLD signal properties contributing to tSNR, that is, temporal mean signal (tMean) and temporal standard deviation (tSD), vary across the brain, associate with FC reliability, and are modulated by tasks. We found that, relative to rest, tasks enhanced FC reliability and increased tSD for specific task‐engaged regions. However, FC signal variability and reliability is broadly dampened during tasks outside task‐engaged regions. From our analyses, we observed signal variability was the strongest driver of FC reliability. Overall, our findings suggest that the choice of task can have an important impact on reliability and should be considered in relation to maximizing reliability in networks of interest as part of study design.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

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