Paper detail

Nonlinear Deconvolution by Sampling Biophysically Plausible Hemodynamic Models

Non-invasive methods to measure brain activity are important to understand cognitive processes in the human brain. A prominent example is functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), which is a noisy measurement of a delayed signal that depends non-linearly on the neuronal activity through the neurovascular coupling. These characteristics make the inference of neuronal activity from fMRI a difficult but important step in fMRI studies that require information at the neuronal level. In this article, we address this inference problem using a Bayesian approach where we model the latent neural activity as a stochastic process and assume that the observed BOLD signal results from a realistic physiological (Balloon) model. We apply a recently developed smoothing method called APIS to efficiently sample the posterior given single event fMRI time series. To infer neuronal signals with high likelihood for multiple time series efficiently, a modification of the original algorithm is introduced. We demonstrate that our adaptive procedure is able to compensate the lacking of inputs in the model to infer the neuronal activity and that it outperforms dramatically the standard bootstrap particle filter-smoother in this setting. This makes the proposed procedure especially attractive to deconvolve resting state fMRI data. To validate the method, we evaluate the quality of the signals inferred using the timing information contained in them. APIS obtains reliable event timing estimates based on fMRI data gathered during a reaction time experiment with short stimuli. Hence, we show for the first time that one can obtain accurate absolute timing of neuronal activity by reconstructing the latent neural signal.

preprint2018arXivOpen access
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