Multiscale statistical testing for connectome-wide association studies in fMRI
P. Bellec, Y. Benhajali, F. Carbonell, C. Dansereau, G., Albouy, M. Pelland, C. Craddock, O. Collignon, J. Doyon, E., Stip, P. Orban

TL;DR
This study evaluates multiscale statistical testing in fMRI connectome analysis, demonstrating its validity and potential to reveal biologically relevant effects across different scales in clinical datasets.
Contribution
It introduces a multiscale approach for connectome-wide association studies that controls FDR independently at each scale and combines results with permutation testing.
Findings
FDR is properly controlled across scales with independent FDR correction.
Discovery rates vary with scale, higher at lower scales below 25.
Statistical maps are consistent across scales and align with existing literature.
Abstract
Alterations in brain connectivity have been associated with a variety of clinical disorders using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We investigated empirically how the number of brain parcels (or scale) impacted the results of a mass univariate general linear model (GLM) on connectomes. The brain parcels used as nodes in the connectome analysis were functionnally defined by a group cluster analysis. We first validated that a classic Benjamini-Hochberg procedure with parametric GLM tests did control appropriately the false-discovery rate (FDR) at a given scale. We then observed on realistic simulations that there was no substantial inflation of the FDR across scales, as long as the FDR was controlled independently within each scale, and the presence of true associations could be established using an omnibus permutation test combining all scales. Second, we observed both on…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Advanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Advanced MRI Techniques and Applications
