AFNI Message Board

Dear AFNI users-

We are very pleased to announce that the new AFNI Message Board framework is up! Please join us at:

https://discuss.afni.nimh.nih.gov

Existing user accounts have been migrated, so returning users can login by requesting a password reset. New users can create accounts, as well, through a standard account creation process. Please note that these setup emails might initially go to spam folders (esp. for NIH users!), so please check those locations in the beginning.

The current Message Board discussion threads have been migrated to the new framework. The current Message Board will remain visible, but read-only, for a little while.

Sincerely, AFNI HQ

History of AFNI updates  

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May 05, 2017 12:02PM
Greetings fellow imagers--

The Eklund group showed with resting data that false positive rates are not well contained when traditional assumptions are made about the spatial smoothness of BOLD fMRI data when block-based analyses are conducted--and that this is less so for event-related analyses. This leads us to ask about the implications for resting fMRI connectivity analyses. It's challenging to apply the logic of Eklund et al. in this case because their approach hinges on finding spurious block / event-related effects in resting data (NB: there is room here for speculation about natural fluctuations in thinking/emoting that could account for what Eklund considers spurious). Specifically, we can't apply the Eklund approach to determining false-positive rates resulting from resting fMRI connectivity analysis given that there are no naturally generated 'connectivity free' data in which spuriously high levels of connectivity could be detected. Perhaps there have been attempts with simulated data? This is not to say that we should continue to make classic assumptions in the case of resting fMRI functional connectivity analyses. But given that false positive rates vary as a function of block versus event-related approaches, it's not clear, either, that the false-positive rates they report are due entirely to heavy tails in the spatial distribution of BOLD data that should, then, be assumed across all manner of fMRI analyses. Moving forward, we will make this assumption, however, until we have reason to do otherwise. Thoughts on this topic or, perhaps, alternative courses of action to recommend?

Many thanks!

Paul
Subject Author Posted

Clustering in AFNI - Updates Feb 2017

Bob Cox February 16, 2017 01:19PM

Re: Clustering in AFNI - Updates Feb 2017

Bob Cox February 16, 2017 09:16PM

Re: Clustering in AFNI - Updates Feb 2017

ptaylor April 19, 2017 11:50AM

Re: Clustering in AFNI - Updates Feb 2017

paul.hamilton May 05, 2017 12:02PM

Re: Clustering in AFNI - Updates Feb 2017

Bob Cox June 13, 2017 04:25PM

Re: Clustering in AFNI - Updates Feb 2017

DavidZhu July 13, 2017 02:31PM