Voxel-based morphometry—the methods

J Ashburner, KJ Friston - Neuroimage, 2000 - Elsevier
Neuroimage, 2000Elsevier
At its simplest, voxel-based morphometry (VBM) involves a voxel-wise comparison of the
local concentration of gray matter between two groups of subjects. The procedure is
relatively straightforward and involves spatially normalizing high-resolution images from all
the subjects in the study into the same stereotactic space. This is followed by segmenting the
gray matter from the spatially normalized images and smoothing the gray-matter segments.
Voxel-wise parametric statistical tests which compare the smoothed gray-matter images from …
At its simplest, voxel-based morphometry (VBM) involves a voxel-wise comparison of the local concentration of gray matter between two groups of subjects. The procedure is relatively straightforward and involves spatially normalizing high-resolution images from all the subjects in the study into the same stereotactic space. This is followed by segmenting the gray matter from the spatially normalized images and smoothing the gray-matter segments. Voxel-wise parametric statistical tests which compare the smoothed gray-matter images from the two groups are performed. Corrections for multiple comparisons are made using the theory of Gaussian random fields. This paper describes the steps involved in VBM, with particular emphasis on segmenting gray matter from MR images with nonuniformity artifact. We provide evaluations of the assumptions that underpin the method, including the accuracy of the segmentation and the assumptions made about the statistical distribution of the data.
Elsevier