ME-ICA / tedana

TE-dependent analysis of multi-echo fMRI
https://tedana.readthedocs.io
GNU Lesser General Public License v2.1
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Documentation to highlight situations or studies where multi-echo or tedana are specifically useful #520

Open handwerkerd opened 4 years ago

handwerkerd commented 4 years ago

Summary

Several developers discussed adding a section to the documentation that highlights situations or specific studies that demonstrate where multi-echo fMRI in general or specific methods have been shown to be useful. This could be a either a "case studies" or "killer apps" section.

Additional Detail

I've open this issue as a place for people to suggest content that could go into this section until someone actually turns this content into a cohesive section of the documentation.

Next Steps

handwerkerd commented 4 years ago

Just to get some case examples started:

benoitberanger commented 4 years ago

The quest for the best: The impact of different EPI sequences on the sensitivity of random effect fMRI group analyses https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.10.071

In the Conclusion :

We note activation studies of the orbitofrontal cortex affected by susceptibility artifacts as an important exception, since multi-echo EPI provides superior sensitivity as compared to their single echo counterparts.

tsalo commented 4 years ago

@handwerkerd should we include uses of multi-echo combined with other things, like physio or phase data?

dowdlelt commented 4 years ago

I'm not sure where to file something like this, but this paper is interesting in using ultra high res, 7T multiecho fmri as means to examine layer profiles. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S1053811911001984?via%3Dihub One interesting finding for me was that different layers have different optimal echo times, and this can be related to myeline content.