2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2014.06.074
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Resting State fMRI in the moving fetus: A robust framework for motion, bias field and spin history correction

Abstract: There is growing interest in exploring fetal functional brain development, particularly with Resting State fMRI. However, during a typical fMRI acquisition, the womb moves due to maternal respiration and the fetus may perform large-scale and unpredictable movements. Conventional fMRI processing pipelines, which assume that brain movements are infrequent or at least small, are not suitable. Previous published studies have tackled this problem by adopting conventional methods and discarding as much as 40% or mor… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(84 citation statements)
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“…The emergence of long-range projection, commissural and association fibers initiates the onset of thalamocortical, as well as inter-and intrahemispheric functional connectivity. These early Present-day neuroimaging studies have detected functional brain networks from as early as 26 PCW (Ferrazzi et al, 2014;Thomason et al, 2015). These networks follow a primary-to-higher order maturational sequence, consistent with their behavioral correlates.…”
Section: Electrophysiological Connectivitysupporting
confidence: 56%
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“…The emergence of long-range projection, commissural and association fibers initiates the onset of thalamocortical, as well as inter-and intrahemispheric functional connectivity. These early Present-day neuroimaging studies have detected functional brain networks from as early as 26 PCW (Ferrazzi et al, 2014;Thomason et al, 2015). These networks follow a primary-to-higher order maturational sequence, consistent with their behavioral correlates.…”
Section: Electrophysiological Connectivitysupporting
confidence: 56%
“…Furthermore, the use of sedative medication -if administered -is generally confined to infants scanned in a clinical setting and may thus introduce a bias in terms of the effect of motion, as well as differences in physiological parameters and sleep state/level of consciousness between health and disease states. Preventing motion is even more challenging in fetal imaging, where large displacements of the fetal head are not uncommon and maternal respiration and potential movement present additional challenges (Ferrazzi et al, 2014).…”
Section: Methodological Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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