Hi,
I am slightly confused about the way temporal derivatives are dealt with in FSL
(and consequently about other sets of basis functions).
When temporal derivatives are added to EVs in the model specification and the (default) option of working with original EVs is selected, then contrasts are specified as if only one regressor was entered, and the help
file states that this “will result in a single [1] contrast for each resulting real EV, and then an F-test across these”.
If this is the case, it makes sense but then I am wondering
- what does the tstat map (corresponding to this contrast) represent (how is
this computed).
- Which contrast is computed for a contrast specifying a difference between 2
original EVs (each having a temporal derivative). Is this the F test across the
2 contrasts [EV1_canonical]>[EV2_canonical] and [EV1_deriv]>[EV2_deriv]? or
across the 4 possible contrasts?
- What is passed to the second level? According the the tutorials
I understand that it is the estimate for the canonical part of the EV? But then
I am not sure to which files this corresponds to, nor why....
Also I read in a recent paper (Pernet C Frontiers 2014) that the temporal
derivatives are orthogonalized with respect to all the other EVs, but could not
find any confirmation/explanation of that in the FSL help....
Any clarification would be welcome!
Many thanks
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