Submitted by Yoshinari Abe on Sat, 07/27/2013 - 07:42
Dear REST experts,
Thank you for your excellent software.
I have a quetion about REST GCA.
I set my images (TR = 2000 ms, 194 points) into Input Parameters, set the ROI(ventral striatum) in the voxel-wise manner, select "coefficient-based", and set the order of 1. The x2y maps show some regions, but the y2x maps show nothing else. I wonder if "order of 1" is incorrect. Maybe, should I set the order of 194?
Thank you in advance,
Yours sincerely
Yoshinari Abe
Submitted by jigongjun on Mon, 07/29/2013 - 13:43 Permalink
Re: GCA, order
Hi,
I don't think the "order of 1" is incorrect.
But I am not sure what do you refer to ( “the y2x maps show nothing else” )
Uploading the 'x2y' and 'y2x' one-sample t test map, may be helpful to show your question.
Gong-Jun
Submitted by zangzx on Tue, 07/30/2013 - 17:18 Permalink
Re: GCA, order
It is hard to define a wrong order. Basically, a 2s-TR is not recommended for voxel-wise GCA. There must be many brain regions that communicate more or less than 2s with vStriatum.
Since there is no way to deal with this problem in fMRI, I suggest you to pre-pick some ROIs and run a ROI-wise GCA, which somehow will reduce the problem.
Submitted by Yoshinari Abe on Fri, 08/09/2013 - 17:11 Permalink
Re: GCA, order
Dear REST experts
Submitted by zangzx on Fri, 08/09/2013 - 19:42 Permalink
Re: GCA, order
Hi, Abe,
I think it is maybe SPM that leads to no results in y2x results. As you know, the SPM t tests is only designed for one-tailed. As far as I know, you will always get a negtive-coefficient map with y2x. If you set the contrast to 1, instead of -1, the SPM will output the significant positive results which obviously show no results for negtive-y2x map. So, I suggest you to set a -1 contrast for y2x. Or, you can use one sample t test in REST (this is 2 tailed condition).
In my paper I did a voxel wise analysis but what I actually think is not perfect. I am still fine with it if I were the reviewer.
You can do a voxel wise GCA with striatum, definately. There is no wrong thing at all, but just not that perfect.
I don't quite say it is good to perform a multivariate GCA with 160 ROIs. I mean to select some regions that you are interested in, based some pre knowledge (papers that report related with striatum like your study). Four or five ROIs is definately better than 160.
Hope you like it.
Submitted by Yoshinari Abe on Wed, 08/14/2013 - 13:01 Permalink
Re: GCA, order
Dear Zang
Submitted by zangzx on Thu, 08/15/2013 - 16:02 Permalink
Re: GCA, order
Hi Abe,
That might be no results for y2x map.
For ROI multivariate GCA, the output are n*n matrixs, corresponding to each order. Since you set the order at 1, the output is one 3*3 matrix. In the matrix, the (i,j) element is the coefficient GCA results that ROI j effects ROI i. For example, your 7.17730 e-02 means that your 2nd ROI has that many effects on your first ROI. The diagonal value are auto-regression coefficients.