Results included in this manuscript come from preprocessing performed using PETPrep 0.0.6.dev46+g7efcfc0b8 (Esteban et al. (2019); Esteban et al. (2018); RRID:SCR_016216), which is based on Nipype 1.11.0 (K. Gorgolewski et al. (2011); K. J. Gorgolewski et al. (2018); RRID:SCR_002502).
A total of 1 T1-weighted (T1w) images were found within the input
BIDS dataset. The T1w image was corrected for intensity non-uniformity
(INU) with N4BiasFieldCorrection (Tustison et al. 2010), distributed with ANTs
2.6.5 (Avants et al. 2008,
RRID:SCR_004757), and used as T1w-reference throughout the
workflow. The T1w-reference was then skull-stripped with a
Nipype implementation of the
antsBrainExtraction.sh workflow (from ANTs), using
OASIS30ANTs as target template. Brain tissue segmentation of
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), white-matter (WM) and gray-matter (GM) was
performed on the brain-extracted T1w using fast (FSL (version unknown),
RRID:SCR_002823, Zhang, Brady, and Smith 2001). Brain surfaces
were reconstructed using recon-all (FreeSurfer 7.4.1, RRID:SCR_001847, Dale,
Fischl, and Sereno 1999), and the brain mask estimated previously
was refined with a custom variation of the method to reconcile
ANTs-derived and FreeSurfer-derived segmentations of the cortical
gray-matter of Mindboggle (RRID:SCR_002438, Klein et al. 2017).
Volume-based spatial normalization to one standard space
(MNI152NLin2009cAsym) was performed through nonlinear registration with
antsRegistration (ANTs 2.6.5), using brain-extracted
versions of both T1w reference and the T1w template. The following
template was were selected for spatial normalization and accessed with
TemplateFlow (25.1.2, Ciric et al. 2022): ICBM
152 Nonlinear Asymmetrical template version 2009c [Fonov et al.
(2009), RRID:SCR_008796; TemplateFlow ID:
MNI152NLin2009cAsym].
For each of the 1 PET runs found per subject (across all tasks and
sessions), the following preprocessing steps were performed. Robust head
motion estimation and correction were carried out after generating a
reference image, which was subsequently coregistered to the T1-weighted
anatomical image. A brain mask was computed and the structural image was
segmented with the gtm segmentation workflow from
FreeSurfer. A reference region mask for the semiovale was
generated and the corresponding time-activity curve extracted.
Head-motion parameters with respect to the PET reference (transformation
matrices, and six corresponding rotation and translation parameters) are
estimated before any spatiotemporal filtering using FreeSurfer’s
mri_robust_template. Several confounding time-series were
calculated based on the preprocessed PET: framewise
displacement (FD), DVARS and three region-wise global signals. FD was
computed using two formulations following Power (absolute sum of
relative motions, Power et al. (2014)) and Jenkinson
(relative root mean square displacement between affines, Jenkinson et al. (2002)).
FD and DVARS are calculated for each PET run, both using their
implementations in Nipype (following the definitions by Power et al.
2014). The three global signals are extracted within the CSF, the
WM, and the whole-brain masks. Additionally, a set of physiological
regressors were extracted to allow for component-based noise correction
(CompCor, Behzadi
et al. 2007). Principal components are estimated after high-pass
filtering the preprocessed PET time-series (using a discrete
cosine filter with 128s cut-off) for the two CompCor variants:
temporal (tCompCor) and anatomical (aCompCor). tCompCor components are
then calculated from the top 2% variable voxels within the brain mask.
For aCompCor, three probabilistic masks (CSF, WM and combined CSF+WM)
are generated in anatomical space. The implementation differs from that
of Behzadi et al. in that instead of eroding the masks by 2 pixels on
PET space, a mask of pixels that likely contain a volume fraction of GM
is subtracted from the aCompCor masks. This mask is obtained by dilating
a GM mask extracted from the FreeSurfer’s aseg segmentation,
and it ensures components are not extracted from voxels containing a
minimal fraction of GM. Finally, these masks are resampled into PET
space and binarized by thresholding at 0.99 (as in the original
implementation). Components are also calculated separately within the WM
and CSF masks. For each CompCor decomposition, the k components
with the largest singular values are retained, such that the retained
components’ time series are sufficient to explain 50 percent of variance
across the nuisance mask (CSF, WM, combined, or temporal). The remaining
components are dropped from consideration. The head-motion estimates
calculated in the correction step were also placed within the
corresponding confounds file. The confound time series derived from head
motion estimates and global signals were expanded with the inclusion of
temporal derivatives and quadratic terms for each (Satterthwaite et al.
2013). Frames that exceeded a threshold of 0.5 mm FD or 1.5
standardized DVARS were annotated as motion outliers. Additional
nuisance timeseries are calculated by means of principal components
analysis of the signal found within a thin band (crown) of
voxels around the edge of the brain, as proposed by (Patriat, Reynolds,
and Birn 2017). All resamplings can be performed with a
single interpolation step by composing all the pertinent
transformations (i.e. head-motion transform matrices, susceptibility
distortion correction when available, and co-registrations to anatomical
and output spaces). Gridded (volumetric) resamplings were performed
using nitransforms, configured with cubic B-spline
interpolation.
Many internal operations of PETPrep use Nilearn 0.11.1 (Abraham et al. 2014, RRID:SCR_001362), mostly within the PET processing workflow. For more details of the pipeline, see the section corresponding to workflows in PETPrep’s documentation.
The above boilerplate text was automatically generated by PETPrep with the express intention that users should copy and paste this text into their manuscripts unchanged. It is released under the CC0 license.