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Published November 6, 2019 | Version 0.0
Preprint Open

NAMNIs: Neuromodulation And Multimodal NeuroImaging software

  • 1. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital LMU, Munich, Germany; Department of Radiology, University Hospital LMU, Munich, Germany
  • 2. Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital LMU, Munich, Germany
  • 3. Department of Neurology, University Hospital LMU, Munich, Germany
  • 4. Department of Radiology, University Hospital LMU, Munich, Germany

Description

The basic requirements in neuroimaging research are rapidly changing due to the growing size of data sets and multimodal approaches with ever more complex, time-consuming, diverse and fast-moving standards. Neuromodulation And Multimodal NeuroImaging software (NAMNIs) offers a ready-to-use, open-source pipeline for pre- and post-processing of multimodal neuroimaging and neuromodulation data with a strong focus on reproducibility and support for multi-platform parallelization. The calculations are performed in native volume and surface spaces as well as in MNI standard space. Input and output data of these calculations conform the international Brain Imaging Data Structure (BIDS) format. The software should enable the user to better interpret results using MRI-based modalities and to calculate simulations based on these data, which can later be compared with the results of neuromodulation pilot or clinical studies. The simple integration into a high-performance computing (HPC) environment allows the calculation of large amounts of data or retrospectively combined samples in a feasible period of time.

NAMNIs consists of a processing pipeline for multimodal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data analysis using parallel processing. It performs various pre-processing steps with the aforementioned data, calculating relevant metrics such as the number of activated voxels (spatial extent), within regions of interest (ROIs) effects, ROI-to-whole-brain calculations, probabilistic values, motion parameters, connectivity strength values (standardized in z scores), and more. This is implemented in native space, standard MNI space and surface space for structural T1-, T2-weighted data. In addition, structural T1- and T2-data will be used for the simulation of non-invasive brain stimulation. Calculation steps are performed in parallel with different topologies to enable the processing of large data sets in a reasonable time. It is applicable to HPC and is provided as research software which is free and open-source software (FOSS). Already in the proof-of-concept and prototype phase, the project was published as abstracts of international conferences (Karali et al., 2017) (Karali et al., 2019).

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