Adaptive Smoothing Applied to fMRI Data
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Fecha de publicación
2012ISBN
978-989-5868-33-4
Resumen
One problem of fMRI images is that they include some noise coming from many other sources like the heart
beat, breathing and head motion artifacts. All these sources degrade the data and can cause wrong results in
the statistical analysis. In order to reduce as much as possible the amount of noise and to improve signal
detection, the fMRI data is spatially smoothed prior to the analysis. The most common and standardized
method to do this task is by using a Gaussian filter. The principal problem of this method is that some
regions may be under-smoothed, while others may be over-smoothed. This is caused by the fact that the
extent of smoothing is chosen independently of the data and is assumed to be equal across the image. To
avoid these problems, we suggest in our work to use an adaptive Wiener filter which smooths the images
adaptively, performing a little smoothing where variance is large and more smoothing where the variance is
small. In general, the results that we obtained with the adaptive filter are better than those obtained with the
Gaussian kernel. In this paper we compare the effects of the smoothing with a Gaussian kernel and with an
adaptive Wiener filter, in order to demonstrate the benefits of the proposed approach.
Tipo de documento
Objeto de conferencia
Lengua
Inglés
Palabras clave
Ressonància magnètica
Páginas
7 p.
Publicado por
SciTePress - Science and Technology Publications
Citación
M. Bartés-Serrallonga, J. M. Serra-Grabulosa, A. Adan, C. Falcón, N. Bargalló and J. Solé- Casals, “Adaptive Smoothing Applied to fMRI Data”, Proceedings of IJCCI 2012. 4th International Joint Conference on Computational Intelligence. Barcelona (Spain). ISBN: 978-989-5868-33-4
Nota
IJCCI 2012
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