To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?

In this work, we investigate the importance of explicitly accounting for cross-trial variability in neuroimaging data analysis. To attempt to obtain reliable estimates in a task-based experiment, each condition is usually repeated across many trials. The investigator may be interested in (a) conditi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gang Chen, Srikanth Padmala, Yi Chen, Paul A. Taylor, Robert W. Cox, Luiz Pessoa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:NeuroImage
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811920309812
id doaj-8bc9e87adb26447891e9717e32c00ab7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8bc9e87adb26447891e9717e32c00ab72020-12-17T04:47:19ZengElsevierNeuroImage1095-95722021-01-01225117496To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?Gang Chen0Srikanth Padmala1Yi Chen2Paul A. Taylor3Robert W. Cox4Luiz Pessoa5Corresponding author.; Scientific and Statistical Computing Core, NIMH, National Institutes of Health, USACentre for Neuroscience, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, IndiaGerman Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases, Magdeburg, Germany; IKND, Universität Magdeburg, GermanyScientific and Statistical Computing Core, NIMH, National Institutes of Health, USAScientific and Statistical Computing Core, NIMH, National Institutes of Health, USADepartment of Psychology, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Maryland Neuroimaging Center, University of Maryland, College Park, USAIn this work, we investigate the importance of explicitly accounting for cross-trial variability in neuroimaging data analysis. To attempt to obtain reliable estimates in a task-based experiment, each condition is usually repeated across many trials. The investigator may be interested in (a) condition-level effects, (b) trial-level effects, or (c) the association of trial-level effects with the corresponding behavior data. The typical strategy for condition-level modeling is to create one regressor per condition at the subject level with the underlying assumption that responses do not change across trials. In this methodology of complete pooling, all cross-trial variability is ignored and dismissed as random noise that is swept under the rug of model residuals. Unfortunately, this framework invalidates the generalizability from the confine of specific trials (e.g., particular faces) to the associated stimulus category (“face”), and may inflate the statistical evidence when the trial sample size is not large enough. Here we propose an adaptive and computationally tractable framework that meshes well with the current two-level pipeline and explicitly accounts for trial-by-trial variability. The trial-level effects are first estimated per subject through no pooling. To allow generalizing beyond the particular stimulus set employed, the cross-trial variability is modeled at the population level through partial pooling in a multilevel model, which permits accurate effect estimation and characterization. Alternatively, trial-level estimates can be used to investigate, for example, brain-behavior associations or correlations between brain regions. Furthermore, our approach allows appropriate accounting for serial correlation, handling outliers, adapting to data skew, and capturing nonlinear brain-behavior relationships. By applying a Bayesian multilevel model framework at the level of regions of interest to an experimental dataset, we show how multiple testing can be addressed and full results reported without arbitrary dichotomization. Our approach revealed important differences compared to the conventional method at the condition level, including how the latter can distort effect magnitude and precision. Notably, in some cases our approach led to increased statistical sensitivity. In summary, our proposed framework provides an effective strategy to capture trial-by-trial responses that should be of interest to a wide community of experimentalists.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811920309812
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gang Chen
Srikanth Padmala
Yi Chen
Paul A. Taylor
Robert W. Cox
Luiz Pessoa
spellingShingle Gang Chen
Srikanth Padmala
Yi Chen
Paul A. Taylor
Robert W. Cox
Luiz Pessoa
To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?
NeuroImage
author_facet Gang Chen
Srikanth Padmala
Yi Chen
Paul A. Taylor
Robert W. Cox
Luiz Pessoa
author_sort Gang Chen
title To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?
title_short To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?
title_full To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?
title_fullStr To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?
title_full_unstemmed To pool or not to pool: Can we ignore cross-trial variability in FMRI?
title_sort to pool or not to pool: can we ignore cross-trial variability in fmri?
publisher Elsevier
series NeuroImage
issn 1095-9572
publishDate 2021-01-01
description In this work, we investigate the importance of explicitly accounting for cross-trial variability in neuroimaging data analysis. To attempt to obtain reliable estimates in a task-based experiment, each condition is usually repeated across many trials. The investigator may be interested in (a) condition-level effects, (b) trial-level effects, or (c) the association of trial-level effects with the corresponding behavior data. The typical strategy for condition-level modeling is to create one regressor per condition at the subject level with the underlying assumption that responses do not change across trials. In this methodology of complete pooling, all cross-trial variability is ignored and dismissed as random noise that is swept under the rug of model residuals. Unfortunately, this framework invalidates the generalizability from the confine of specific trials (e.g., particular faces) to the associated stimulus category (“face”), and may inflate the statistical evidence when the trial sample size is not large enough. Here we propose an adaptive and computationally tractable framework that meshes well with the current two-level pipeline and explicitly accounts for trial-by-trial variability. The trial-level effects are first estimated per subject through no pooling. To allow generalizing beyond the particular stimulus set employed, the cross-trial variability is modeled at the population level through partial pooling in a multilevel model, which permits accurate effect estimation and characterization. Alternatively, trial-level estimates can be used to investigate, for example, brain-behavior associations or correlations between brain regions. Furthermore, our approach allows appropriate accounting for serial correlation, handling outliers, adapting to data skew, and capturing nonlinear brain-behavior relationships. By applying a Bayesian multilevel model framework at the level of regions of interest to an experimental dataset, we show how multiple testing can be addressed and full results reported without arbitrary dichotomization. Our approach revealed important differences compared to the conventional method at the condition level, including how the latter can distort effect magnitude and precision. Notably, in some cases our approach led to increased statistical sensitivity. In summary, our proposed framework provides an effective strategy to capture trial-by-trial responses that should be of interest to a wide community of experimentalists.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811920309812
work_keys_str_mv AT gangchen topoolornottopoolcanweignorecrosstrialvariabilityinfmri
AT srikanthpadmala topoolornottopoolcanweignorecrosstrialvariabilityinfmri
AT yichen topoolornottopoolcanweignorecrosstrialvariabilityinfmri
AT paulataylor topoolornottopoolcanweignorecrosstrialvariabilityinfmri
AT robertwcox topoolornottopoolcanweignorecrosstrialvariabilityinfmri
AT luizpessoa topoolornottopoolcanweignorecrosstrialvariabilityinfmri
_version_ 1724380450659500032