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Surface-based tracking for short association fibre tractography

  • Dmitri Shastin (Corresponding author)
  • , Sila Genc
  • , Greg D. Parker
  • , Kristin Koller
  • , Chantal M.W. Tax
  • , John Evans
  • , Khalid Hamandi
  • , William P. Gray
  • , Derek K. Jones
  • , Maxime Chamberland

Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftTijdschriftartikelAcademicpeer review

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Samenvatting

It is estimated that in the human brain, short association fibres (SAF) represent more than half of the total white matter volume and their involvement has been implicated in a range of neurological and psychiatric conditions. This population of fibres, however, remains relatively understudied in the neuroimaging literature. Some of the challenges pertinent to the mapping of SAF include their variable anatomical course and proximity to the cortical mantle, leading to partial volume effects and potentially affecting streamline trajectory estimation. This work considers the impact of seeding and filtering strategies and choice of scanner, acquisition, data resampling to propose a whole-brain, surface-based short (≤30–40 mm) SAF tractography approach. The framework is shown to produce longer streamlines with a predilection for connecting gyri as well as high cortical coverage. We further demonstrate that certain areas of subcortical white matter become disproportionally underrepresented in diffusion-weighted MRI data with lower angular and spatial resolution and weaker diffusion weighting; however, collecting data with stronger gradients than are usually available clinically has minimal impact, making our framework translatable to data collected on commonly available hardware. Finally, the tractograms are examined using voxel- and surface-based measures of consistency, demonstrating moderate reliability, low repeatability and high between-subject variability, urging caution when streamline count-based analyses of SAF are performed.

Originele taal-2Engels
Artikelnummer119423
Aantal pagina's19
TijdschriftNeuroimage
Volume260
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - 15 okt. 2022
Extern gepubliceerdJa

Bibliografische nota

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Authors

Financiering

This research was funded in whole, or in part, by a Wellcome Trust Investigator Award (096646/Z/11/Z), a Wellcome Trust Strategic Award (104943/Z/14/Z), a Wellcome Trust-funded GW4-CAT fellowship (220537/Z/20/Z), the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EP/M029778/1), the Dutch Research Council (17331), a Radboud Excellence Initiative Fellowship, and the Brain Repair and Intracranial Neurotherapeutics (BRAIN) Unit funded by Health and Care Research Wales. For the purpose of open access, the author has applied a CC BY public copyright licence to any Author Accepted Manuscript version arising from this submission.

FinanciersFinanciernummer
Wellcome Trust096646/Z/11/Z, 104943/Z/14/Z
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research CouncilEP/M029778/1
Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek17331

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