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2020 journal original-research Nat Protoc

Analysis of task-based functional MRI data preprocessed with fMRIPrep

Esteban O, Ciric R, Finc K, Blair RW, Markiewicz CJ, Moodie CA, Kent JD, Goncalves M, DuPre E, Gomez DEP, Ye Z, Salo T, Valabregue R, Amlien IK, Liem F, Jacoby N, Stojić H, Cieslak M, Urchs S, Halchenko YO, Ghosh SS, De La Vega A, Yarkoni T, Wright J, Thompson WH, Poldrack RA, Gorgolewski KJ

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1038/s41596-020-0327-3
PubMed
32514178
PMC
PMC7404612
PDF
Open-access copy →
Cited by
307

Key findings

This protocol shows how to integrate fMRIPrep — a BIDS-driven, robust, analysis-agnostic fMRI preprocessing pipeline — into a complete task-based fMRI investigation, addressing reproducibility concerns associated with ad-hoc custom preprocessing.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a standard tool to investigate the neural correlates of cognition. fMRI noninvasively measures brain activity, allowing identification of patterns evoked by tasks performed during scanning. Despite the long history of this technique, the idiosyncrasies of each dataset have led to the use of ad-hoc preprocessing protocols customized for nearly every different study. This approach is time consuming, error prone and unsuitable for combining datasets from many sources. Here we showcase fMRIPrep (http://fmriprep.org), a robust tool to prepare human fMRI data for statistical analysis. This software instrument addresses the reproducibility concerns of the established protocols for fMRI preprocessing. By leveraging the Brain Imaging Data Structure to standardize both the input datasets (MRI data as stored by the scanner) and the outputs (data ready for modeling and analysis), fMRIPrep is capable of preprocessing a diversity of datasets without manual intervention. In support of the growing popularity of fMRIPrep, this protocol describes how to integrate the tool in a task-based fMRI investigation workflow.

Topics

  • reproducibility-tooling
  • neuroimaging-methods

Lab authors

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