Deep brain imaging of three participants across 1 year: The Bergen breakfast scanning club project
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28255Dato
2022-10-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Our understanding of the cognitive functions of the human brain has
tremendously benefited from the population functional Magnetic Resonance
Imaging (fMRI) studies in the last three decades. The reliability and replicability
of the fMRI results, however, have been recently questioned, which has been
named the replication crisis. Sufficient statistical power is fundamental to
alleviate the crisis, by either “going big,” leveraging big datasets, or by “going
small,” densely scanning several participants. Here we reported a “going small”
project implemented in our department, the Bergen breakfast scanning club
(BBSC) project, in which three participants were intensively scanned across
a year. It is expected this kind of new data collection method can provide
novel insights into the variability of brain networks, facilitate research designs
and inference, and ultimately lead to the improvement of the reliability of the
fMRI results.
Forlag
Frontiers MediaSitering
Wang M, Korbmacher M, Eikeland RA, Specht K. Deep brain imaging of three participants across 1 year: The Bergen breakfast scanning club project. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 2022;16Metadata
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