Detrending FreeSurfer Data
Over the course of a run, there can be a linear drift in the signal in different regions of the brain. There are many possible causes for this that have nothing to do with any interesting aspect of your data -- in other words, this linear drift is a nuisance artifact. The second step is to remove this signal drift from the data because it can introduce spurious correlations between two unrelated time series. You can see this for yourself in a quick experiment you could whip up in Excel: take two vectors of 100 randomly generated numbers (e.g., randbetween(1,99)). They should be uncorrelated. Now add 1, 2, 3, ... , 99, 100 to the values in each vector. This simulates a linear trend in the data. You shouldn't be surprised to find that the two vectors are now highly and positively correlated!
A script has been written called detrend.sh that removes the linear trend in your BOLD data:
detrend.sh
#!/bin/bash
USAGE="Usage: detrend.sh filepattern surface sub1 ... subN"
if [ "$#" == "0" ]; then
echo "$USAGE"
exit 1
fi
#first parameter is the filepattern for the .nii.gz time series to be detrended, up to the surface indicator
#e.g., fmcpr.sm6.$surf.?h.nii.gz would use fmcpr.sm6 as the filepattern
filepat="$1"
shift
#second parameter should be specified either as self or fsaverage
surf="$1"
shift
#after the shift command, all the arguments are shifted down one place and the first two arguments
#(the filepattern and surface)
#fall off the list. The remaining arguments should be subject_ids
subs=( "$@" );
hemis=( "lh" "rh" );
for sub in "${subs[@]}"; do
source_dir=${SUBJECTS_DIR}/${sub}/bold
echo ${source_dir}
if [ ! -d ${source_dir} ]; then
#The subject_id does not exist
echo "${source_dir} does not exist!"
else
cd ${source_dir}
readarray -t runs < runs
for r in "${runs[@]}"; do
if [ -n "${r}" ]; then
#the -n test makes sure that the run number is not an empty string
#caused by a trailing newline in the runs file
for hemi in "${hemis[@]}"; do
cd ${source_dir}/${r}
pwd
#subject_id does exist. Detrend
if [ "${surf}" = "self" ]; then
SURFTOUSE=${sub}
else
SURFTOUSE=fsaverage
fi
mri_glmfit --y ${source_dir}/${r}/${filepat}.${surf}.${hemi}.nii.gz \
--glmdir ${source_dir}/${r}/${hemi}.detrend \
--qa --save-yhat --eres-save \
--surf ${SURFTOUSE} ${hemi}
mv ${source_dir}/${r}/${hemi}.detrend/eres.mgh ${source_dir}/${r}/${filepat}.${hemi}.mgh
done
#NEW! Now the script also detrends the mni305 file
mri_glmfit --y ${source_dir}/${r}/${filepat}.mni305.2mm.nii.gz \
--glmdir ${source_dir}/${r}/mni305.detrend \
--qa --save-yhat --eres-save
mv ${source_dir}/${r}/mni305.detrend/eres.mgh ${source_dir}/${r}/${filepat}.mni305.2mm.mgh
fi
done
fi
done
Running the Script
Before running this script, you will need to create a text file called 'runs' in the bold/ directory for each subject's dataset, e.g.,
- FS_T1_501/
- bold/
- runs
- 005/
- 006/
- bold/
The runs
file simply lists each run folder on its own line:
005 006
The detrend.sh script uses this file to determine the folders containing the data to be detrended. If this file doesn't already exist, you can manually generate it in any text editor (e.g., nano runs
or gedit runs
), but the quickest method takes advantage of the fact that the run folders all start with 0, and uses common command-line utilities:
SUBJECT=FS_501 cd ${SUBJECTS_DIR}/${SUBJECT}/bold #if there are fewer than 10 runs of BOLD data, then the run directories will probably have 2 leading zeros ls -1 | grep "^00*" > runs
Assuming all your subject folders have the same run folders to detrend, you would detrend multiple subjects using detrend.sh, specifying a file pattern for the source data (i.e., the name of the preprocessed files generated by FS-FAST, omitting anything after the '?h' hemisphere identifier), followed by a list of subject IDs:
#A SPECIFIC EXAMPLE: (note these parameters may differ substantially from what you would be typing in) detrend.sh fmcpr.sm6 self FS_T1_501 FS_T2_501 FS_T1_505 FS_T2_505 #For a more generalizable example of how you should call this function, see the section below using variables
The gist is that it calls the mri_glmfit function and saves the residuals after the linear trend has been removed from the data. Multiple files are generated in ?h.detrend/ directories in each run directory. The detrended data is subsequently copied back to the run directory as a new file called ${filepat}.?h.mgh, where ${filepat} is whatever file pattern you provided to the script (note that the source data are .nii.gz files, whereas the detrended data are .mgh files).
Using variables
As I mentioned in the comments in the sample code snippet above, what you type depends entirely on the filenames, which in turn depend entirely on how the data were preprocessed. You can use environment variables to help walk you through figuring out the correct file patterns. Also, a handy shortcut exists if you happen to have a subjects
file in $SUBJECTS_DIR
. Putting these two techniques together:
FILEPATTERN=fmcpr #the preprocessed files will almost always be called fmcpr SMOOTHING=".sm4" #how much smoothing did you use when you ran preproc-sess? SLICETIME=".down" #[".up" | ".down" | OMIT ] SURFACE=self #[self | fsaverage] detrend.sh ${FILEPATTERN}${SLICETIME}${SMOOTHING} $SURFACE `cat ${subjects}`
This will execute the detrend.sh script on all the subjects listed in the subjects text file, using the subject's self surface. If the data were preprocessed with the fsaverage surface, you would specify fsaverage, in place of self I just figured this out today.