Are inter-subject functional correlations consistent across different movies?

AbstractMovie fMRI has been increasingly used in investigations of human brain function. Inter-subject functional correlation (ISFC), which evaluates stimulus-dependent inter-regional synchrony between brains exposed to the same stimulus, is emerging as an influencing measure for movie fMRI data analyses. Before the wide application of ISFC analyses, it will be useful to investigate the degree to which they are similar and different across different movies. Based on the four movie fMRI runs of 178 subjects included in the “human connectome project (HCP) S1200 Release”, we evaluated ISFCs throughout the brain and analyzed their consistency across different movies using intra-class correlation (ICC). We also investigated the generalizability of ISFC-based predictive models, which is closely related to their consist ency, with sex classification and grip strength prediction used as test cases. The results showed that the intensity of ISFCs was generally weak (0.047). Except a few within-network ones (e.g., ICC of ISFC in the PON was 0.402), ISFCs throughout the brain exhibited low consistency, as indicated by a mean ICC of 0.130. The accuracies for inter-run predictions (60.7-72.8% for sex classification, and R = 0.122–0.275 for grip strength prediction) were much lower than those for intra-run predictions (73.2-83.0% for sex classification, and R = 0.325–0.403 for grip strength prediction), a nd this indicates poor generalizability of predictive models based on ...
Source: Brain Imaging and Behavior - Category: Neurology Source Type: research
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