Available at Amazon. So, you want to analyze fMRI data? Here's a good place to start. Historically, researchers wanting to learn fMRI techniques have had to apprentice themselves to one or several senior researchers who have mastered the techniques. This is still arguably the best way to familiarize oneself with everything since learning Linux/Unix and how to navigate several image processing packages can get a bit hairy in the beginning and a guiding hand is very much appreciated. That said, nearly everyone I know in this field also gets a textbook. Huettel's Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging. This is *the* book to get if you really want to know the ins and outs of MRI physics, analysis, preprocessing etc. But it is very dense. Huettel's book is meant to be approached chronologically with new information building on what you learned in previous chapters making it an excellent textbook for a course on this subject. ...
Reviews of literature, breakthroughs, and trends with my reactions.