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SPM  November 2009

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Subject:

Re: two sessions analysis

From:

"Stephen J. Fromm" <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

Stephen J. Fromm

Date:

Tue, 3 Nov 2009 22:30:34 +0000

Content-Type:

text/plain

Parts/Attachments:

Parts/Attachments

text/plain (71 lines)

On Tue, 3 Nov 2009 12:22:12 +0000, Jonathan Peelle <[log in to unmask]>
wrote:

Jonathan,

Maybe I'm interpreting Marta's design matrix schematic incorrectly, but doesn't
it look like there's an implicit baseline in each of the sessions? (The dark
bands in the regressors for the conditions.) If so, that would serve as
your "C" below.

Of course, everything you wrote stands on its own.

>Hi Marta
>
>The problem is that the effect in which you are interested (right vs.
>left ankle dorsiflexion) is also a difference between sessions. By
>modeling session effects (which is the right thing to do) (columns 3
>and 4 of your design matrix), you essentially remove any overall
>difference between sessions, making it difficult or impossible to pull
>out differences in your conditions. Put another way, your effects of
>interest are confounded with session effects.
>
>If you have a chance to change the design, you could consider one of
>the following alternatives:
>
>1) Have both conditions of interest in both sessions (i.e. alternate
>left and right ankle movements within both sessions). This way you
>have the same number of events of each type but they are not related
>to session effects.
>
>2) Have some baseline condition you can compare the ankle dorsiflexion
>to. This is no doubt explained in more detail somewhere previously on
>the list, but the idea is that it's possible to look at an interaction
>across sessions, but not really main effects. I.e.
>
>Session 1: condition A and condition C
>Session 2: condition B and condition C
>
>contrast A > B is problematic because of session effects;
>contrast: (A > C) > (B > C) would be fine.
>
>If you are stuck with the data as it stands (and no possibility of
>finding a baseline condition to add to the model), I don't know if
>there is a particularly good solution. You can choose not to model
>session effects, but this will add noise, and I think be a bit harder
>to interpret (e.g., is higher signal in a region actually due to your
>task, or could it just be a byproduct of one session by chance having
>a different level of activity than another?).
>
>Hope this helps,
>Jonathan
>
>
>On Tue, Nov 3, 2009 at 11:46 AM, Gandolla Marta
><[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>> Hi everyone,
>>
>>    I have some problems in two sessions analysis. I want to compare two
>> activation maps from the same subject in two different conditions. I built
>> the design matrix with two sessions (using first level analysis) so I ended
>> up with four columns as you can see from the first figure of the attached
>> file. I then did inference analysis with contrast vector of [1 -1 0 0] and I
>> suppose I shoud get a map with the significative differences between the
two
>> conditions.
>> my problem is that if I implement this same approach with maps that are
>> significantly different for sure (right ankle dorsiflexion and left ankle
>> dorsiflexion) I get a "difference map" that is not at all as expected. so as
>> you can see what I'm talking about, the second figure of the attached file
>> is the result I got.

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