UPV-EHU ADDI
  • Back
    • English
    • español
    • Basque
  • Login
  • English 
    • English
    • español
    • Basque
  • FAQ
View Item 
  •   ADDI
  • INVESTIGACIÓN
  • Grupos de Investigación, Institutos y Centros Colaboradores
  • BCBL
  • BCBL-Publications
  • View Item
  •   ADDI
  • INVESTIGACIÓN
  • Grupos de Investigación, Institutos y Centros Colaboradores
  • BCBL
  • BCBL-Publications
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Reproducible protocol to obtain and measure first-order relay human thalamic white-matter tracts

Thumbnail
View/Open
Reproducible protocol to obtain and measure2022.pdf (3.201Mb)
Date
2022
Author
Liu, Mengxing
Lerma-Usabiaga, Garikoitz
Clascá, Francisco
Paz-Alonso, Pedro M.
Metadata
Show full item record
  Estadisticas en RECOLECTA
(LA Referencia)

Mengxing Liu, Garikoitz Lerma-Usabiaga, Francisco Clascá, Pedro M. Paz-Alonso, Reproducible protocol to obtain and measure first-order relay human thalamic white-matter tracts, NeuroImage, Volume 262, 2022, 119558, ISSN 1053-8119, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119558
NeuroImage
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10810/57846
Abstract
The “primary ”or “first-order relay ”nuclei of the thalamus feed the cerebral cortex with information about on- going activity in the environment or the subcortical motor systems. Because of the small size of these nuclei and the high specificity of their input and output pathways, new imaging protocols are required to investigate thala- mocortical interactions in human perception, cognition and language. The goal of the present study was twofold: I) to develop a reconstruction protocol based on in vivo diffusion MRI to extract and measure the axonal fiber tracts that originate or terminate specifically in individual first-order relay nuclei; and, II) to test the reliability of this reconstruction protocol. In left and right hemispheres, we investigated the thalamocortical/corticothalamic axon bundles linking each of the first-order relay nuclei and their main cortical target areas, namely, the lateral geniculate nucleus (optic radiation), the medial geniculate nucleus (acoustic radiation), the ventral posterior nu- cleus (somatosensory radiation) and the ventral lateral nucleus (motor radiation). In addition, we examined the main subcortical input pathway to the ventral lateral posterior nucleus, which originates in the dentate nucleus of the cerebellum. Our protocol comprised three components: defining regions-of-interest; preprocessing diffu- sion data; and modeling white-matter tracts and tractometry. We then used computation and test-retest methods to check whether our protocol could reliably reconstruct these tracts of interest and their profiles. Our results demonstrated that the protocol had nearly perfect computational reproducibility and good-to-excellent test-retest reproducibility. This new protocol may be of interest for both basic human brain neuroscience and clinical studies and has been made publicly available to the scientific community.
Collections
  • BCBL-Publications

DSpace 6.4 software copyright © -2023  DuraSpace
OpenAIRE
EHU Bilbioteka
 

 

Browse

All of ADDICommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesDepartamentos (cas.)Departamentos (eus.)SubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesDepartamentos (cas.)Departamentos (eus.)Subjects

My Account

Login

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

DSpace 6.4 software copyright © -2023  DuraSpace
OpenAIRE
EHU Bilbioteka