Reliability of neuroanatomical measurements in a multisite longitudinal study of youth at risk for psychosis

Autor: Cannon, TD, Sun, F, Mcewen, SJ, Papademetris, X, He, G, van Erp, TGM, Jacobson, A, Bearden, CE, Walker, E, Hu, X, Zhou, L, Seidman, LJ, Thermenos, HW, Cornblatt, B, Olvet, DM, Perkins, D, Belger, A, Cadenhead, K, Tsuang, M, Mirzakhanian, H, Addington, J, Frayne, R, Woods, SW, Mcglashan, TH, Constable, RT, Qiu, M, Mathalon, DH, Thompson, P, Toga, AW
Rok vydání: 2012
Předmět:
Zdroj: Cannon, TD; Sun, F; Mcewen, SJ; Papademetris, X; He, G; van Erp, TGM; et al.(2014). Reliability of neuroanatomical measurements in a multisite longitudinal study of youth at risk for psychosis. Human Brain Mapping, 35(5), 2424-2434. doi: 10.1002/hbm.22338. UCLA: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/6xk8p3gg
ISSN: 1097-0193
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22338.
Popis: Multisite longitudinal neuroimaging designs are used to identify differential brain structural change associated with onset or progression of disease. The reliability of neuroanatomical measurements over time and across sites is a crucial aspect of power in such studies. Prior work has found that while within-site reliabilities of neuroanatomical measurements are excellent, between-site reliability is generally more modest. Factors that may increase between-site reliability include standardization of scanner platform and sequence parameters and correction for between-scanner variations in gradient nonlinearities. Factors that may improve both between- and within-site reliability include use of registration algorithms that account for individual differences in cortical patterning and shape. In this study 8 healthy volunteers were scanned twice on successive days at 8 sites participating in the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (NAPLS). All sites employed 3 Tesla scanners and standardized acquisition parameters. Site accounted for 2 to 30% of the total variance in neuroanatomical measurements. However, site-related variations were trivial (
Databáze: OpenAIRE