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Hi Lucia,

Please see below:


On 7 August 2017 at 08:03, Li, Lucia M <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Dear Anderson,


Thank you very much for the design & explanation. We are now setting up the feat designs for the first tests (one for testing main effect of TIME and the interaction, one for testing main effect of GROUP).


I just had a couple of questions I hope you may be able to clarify.


1) In the excel file with the design you made previously, there is a column marked "EB". Do I need to change the 'Group' column in the 'EVs' tab of the GLM design to the same as this? (i.e. instead of the default list of '1', I need to change it to '1 1 2 2 3 3 ... ')? Or is the EB column in the file you sent only there to explain what you've done?



These are the exchangeability blocks, one per subject. For the time effects and the interactions, these would be entered into randomise with the option "-e design.grp". For the effect of group, in addition to "-e design.grp", you'd also include the option "--permuteBlocks".

In PALM, this could go all in a single run with "-eb" instead of "-e":

palm -i input.nii.gz -d design1.csv -d design2.csv -t contrasts1.csv -t contrasts2.csv -eb EB.csv -whole -within -corrcon [... other options ...]
 

2) In C1 (main effect of time), the way the contrast is set up is to test 't1>t2'. If I wanted to get 't2>t1', would I just enter in '-8 -8' (or in our case '-20 -20' because we have 20 subjects) in that line on the 'Contrasts & F tests' tab?


Yes, or just [-1 -1 0 0 ...]
 


3) In the file that you've sent, you've put 'F1' next to 'C1' and 'F2' next to 'C2'. Am I right in thinking that what this means is to have 2 F-tests, and for F1, check the box next to C1 only? And for the F2, check the box next to C2 only? (i.e. I do not need to check the boxes for 'C1' and 'C2' within the same F-test column)



There is no need to do F-tests, unless you really want them, since the "-corrcon" already corrects across all. If you really want the F-tests, F1 go with C1 only, F2 with C2 only. If you include negative contrasts, the F-tests remain unchanged.

Hope this helps!

All the best,

Anderson

 

Many thanks again for your help and further clarification.


Kind regards,

Lucia


From: FSL - FMRIB's Software Library <[log in to unmask]> on behalf of Anderson M. Winkler <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: 05 August 2017 03:05:30
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: [FSL] fMRI - 2 groups, 2 conditions
 
Hi Lucia,

Please see below:


On 3 August 2017 at 19:19, Lucia M Li <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Dear FSL users & experts,

I have 20 subjects, who were split into two intervention groups (n=8 drug, n=12 placebo), and underwent a task fMRI at two time points (pre and post intervention).

I was hoping to test for whether there is a:
- a main effect of intervention (the between subject factor)
- a main effect of time (the within subject factor)
- an interaction between the two factors


Can I suggest you change the way as the analysis is approached? The most interesting effect is the interaction time by group, in that it will show that the slopes over time differ when the subjects took the drug compared when they did not.

The main effect of time would collapse the two groups, but that isn't interesting because one of the groups took the drug, whereas the other did not. It's different than in an observational study where over time we may be investigating the progression of a disorder.

The main effect of group would collapse the two timepoints, but that isn't interesting either because in the first timepoint nothing was administered (either drug or placebo), such that there is no point in mixing the two.

You can still do the analysis and test the interaction (definitely the one you would want to report), and also the main effects of group and time, but if the interaction is significant, then these main effects are further less interesting, because the effect of one depends on the other, and vice-versa. In any case, there is a worked out example at this earlier post. Note that there are two designs, one for the within-subject effects and interaction, and another for the between-subject effects.

If the allocation of subjects into the two groups was random, and you'd like to show that there is no residual (incidental) difference between them after the randomisation, a simple two-sample t-test using the baseline is sufficient.

Also, if the subjects were randomised into treatments, you can test only the second timepoint, comparing the two groups, while including the first timepoint (baseline) as a continuous, voxelwise nuisance regressor in the design matrix, thus eliminating the need for a repeated measures design. This would be assembled as a two-sample t-test with additional covariate, following this example from the GLM manual.

Now trying to answer the questions below:
 
I thought that the 2-way mixed effect ANOVA might be the way to do it (https://fsl.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fsl/fslwiki/GLM#ANOVA:_2-groups.2C_2-levels_per_subject_.282-way_Mixed_Effect_ANOVA.29) but am a little confused as to how exactly to set it up.

In the example given:
- does 'run' signify a factor with different levels or two runs done to acquire more data?

'Run' means timepoint. This is testing the main effect of time. It can also be seen as a within-subject factor with two levels. It doesn't mean the two runs were just for having more data (e.g., to improve power or SNR).
 
- if the former, am I right in thinking that C1 (run effect) would give me the effect of the within subject factor?

Yes, that's right.
 
- am I right in thinking that C2 would give me the effect of the interaction between of the two factors?

Yes, C2 is for the interaction group by time (or group by run), which is your most interesting contrast if you use this strategy, or if your subjects were not randomised (in which case you wouldn't use the baseline as nuisance).
 
i.e. there is no contrast which would give me the effect of the between subjects factor?

Exactly, in this design it isn't possible to test the main effect of group. That requires a different design, that is in the spreadsheet in the earlier post linked above.

Hope this helps!

All the best,

Anderson

 

Many thanks in advance for your help!

Kind regards,
Lucia