Constructing the KOR152 Korean Young Adult Brain Atlas Utilizing the State-of-the-Art Method for the Age-Specific Population
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Published:2024-06-25
Issue:6
Volume:21
Page:664-671
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ISSN:1738-3684
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Container-title:Psychiatry Investigation
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Psychiatry Investig
Author:
Oh HarinORCID,
Kim JongrakORCID,
Park SunghyunORCID,
Jang MoonyoungORCID,
Kim MinahORCID,
Kwon Jun SooORCID
Abstract
Objective Spatial normalization is an essential process for comparative analyses that heavily depends on the standard brain template used. Brain morphological differences are observed in different populations due to genetic and environmental factors, causing mismatches in regions when the data are normalized to different population templates. Recent studies have indicated differences between Caucasian and East Asian populations as well as within East Asian populations, suggesting the necessity of population-specific brain templates. Thus, this study aimed to construct a Korean young adult age-specific brain template utilizing an advanced method of template construction to update the currently available Korean template.Methods The KOR152 template was constructed via affine and nonlinear iterative procedures based on prior studies. We compared the morphological features of different population templates (MNI152, Indian_157, and CN200). The distance and volumetric changes before and after registering the data to these templates were calculated for registration accuracy.Results The KOR152 global brain features revealed a shorter overall length than the other population templates. The registration accuracy by distance and volumetric change was significantly lower than that of the other population templates, implying that the KOR152 was more accurate than other templates for the young adult Korean population.Conclusion This study provided evidence for the need for a population-specific template that may be more appropriate for structural and functional studies in Korean populations.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Korea Brain Research Institute
Ministry of Science and ICT
Publisher
Korean Neuropsychiatric Association