Litcius/Paper detail

How to Interpret Resting-State fMRI: Ask Your Participants

Javier González-Castillo, Julia W. Y. Kam, Colin W. Hoy, Peter A. Bandettini

2021Journal of Neuroscience150 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Resting-state fMRI (rsfMRI) reveals brain dynamics in a task-unconstrained environment as subjects let their minds wander freely. Consequently, resting subjects navigate a rich space of cognitive and perceptual states (i.e., ongoing experience). How this ongoing experience shapes rsfMRI summary metrics (e.g., functional connectivity) is unknown, yet likely to contribute uniquely to within- and between-subject differences. Here we argue that understanding the role of ongoing experience in rsfMRI requires access to standardized, temporally resolved, scientifically validated first-person descriptions of those experiences. We suggest best practices for obtaining those descriptions via introspective methods appropriately adapted for use in fMRI research. We conclude with a set of guidelines for fusing these two data types to answer pressing questions about the etiology of rsfMRI.

Topics & Concepts

Resting state fMRISet (abstract data type)IntrospectionPsychologyCognitive psychologyPerceptionCognitionAsk priceFunctional connectivityComputer scienceNeuroscienceEconomyProgramming languageEconomicsFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesMind wandering and attentionNeural dynamics and brain function