Abstract
Functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) is a widely used transcranial brain imaging technique in neuroscience research. Nevertheless, its lack of anatomical information poses challenges for designing appropriate optode montage and localizing fNIRS signals to underlying anatomical regions. The photon measurement density function (PMDF) is often employed to address these issues, as it accurately measures the sensitivity of a fNIRS signal channel to perturbations of absorption coefficients at any brain locations. However, existing PMDF-based localization methods have two limitations: a limited channel space, and PMDF estimation based on single standard head models, which differ anatomically from individual subjects. To overcome these limitations, this study proposes a continuous fNIRS standard channel space and constructs a PMDF-based transcranial brain atlas (PMDF-TBA) by calculating PMDFs based on MRI images of 48 adults. PMDF-TBA contains group-averaged sensitivities of channels to gray matter and brain regions of atlases, such as Brodmann, AAL2, and LPBA40. Through leave-one-out cross-validation, we evaluated the prediction ability of PMDF-TBA for sensitivity of unseen individuals and found that it outperformed PMDFs based on single standard head models. Thus, PMDF-TBA serves as a more generalizable fNIRS spatial localization tool. Therefore, PMDF-TBA can be utilized to optimize optode montage design, improve channel sensitivity to target brain regions, and assist in the source localization of fNIRS data, thereby promoting the application of fNIRS in neuroscience research.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.