posted on 2025-09-24, 15:27authored byKatharina Stute, Louisa K Gossé, Samuel Montero-Hernandez, Guy A Perkins, Meryem A Yücel, Simone Cutini, Turgut Durduran, Ann-Christine Ehlis, Marco Ferrari, Judit Gervain, Rickson C Mesquita, Felipe Orihuela-Espina, Valentina Quaresima, Felix Scholkmann, Ilias Tachtsidis, Alessandro Torricelli, Heidrun Wabnitz, Arjun G Yodh, Stefan A Carp, Hamid Dehghani, Qianqian Fang, Sergio Fantini, Yoko Hoshi, Haijing Niu, Hellmuth Obrig, Franziska Klein, Christina Artemenko, Aahana Bajracharya, Beatrix Barth, Christian Bartkowski, Lénac Borot, Chiara Bulgarelli, David R Busch, Malgorzata Chojak, Jason M DeFreitas, Laura Diprossimo, Thomas Dresler, Aykut Eken, Mahmoud ElsherifMahmoud Elsherif, Lauren L Emberson, Anna Exner, Talukdar Raian Ferdous, Abigail Fiske, Samuel H Forbes, Jessica Gemignani, Christian Gerloff, Ségolène MR Guérin, Edgar Guevara, Antonia F de C Hamilton, SM Hadi Hosseini, Divya Jain, Anastasia N Kerr-German, Haiyan Kong, Agnes Kroczek, Jason K Longhurst, Michael Lührs, Rob J MacLennan, David MA Mehler, Kimberly L Meidenbauer, David Moreau, Murat C Mutlu, Renato Orti, Ishara Paranawithana, Paola Pinti, Ali Rahimpour Jounghani, Vanessa Reindl, Nicholas A Ross, Sara Sanchez-Alonso, Oliver Seidel-Marzi, Mohinish Shukla, Syed A Usama, Musa Talati, Grégoire Vergotte, M Atif Yaqub, Chia-Chuan Yu, Hanieh Zainodini
Significance: A shared understanding of terminology is essential for clear scientific communication and minimizing misconceptions. This is particularly challenging in rapidly expanding, interdisciplinary domains that utilize functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), where researchers come from diverse backgrounds and apply their expertise in fields such as engineering, neuroscience, and psychology. Aim: The fNIRS Glossary Project was established to develop a community-sourced glossary covering key fNIRS terms, including those related to the continuous-wave (CW), frequency-domain (FD), and time-domain (TD) NIRS techniques. Approach: The glossary was collaboratively developed by a diverse group of 76 fNIRS researchers, representing a wide range of career stages (from PhD students to experts) and disciplines. This collaborative process, structured across five phases, ensured the glossary’s depth and comprehensiveness. Results: The glossary features over 300 terms categorized into six key domains: analysis, experimental design, hardware, neuroscience, mathematics, and physics. It also includes abbreviations, symbols, synonyms, references, alternative definitions, and figures where relevant. Conclusions: The fNIRS glossary provides a community-sourced resource that facilitates education and effective scientific communication within the fNIRS community and related fields. By lowering barriers to learning and engaging with fNIRS, the glossary is poised to benefit a broad spectrum of researchers, including those with limited access to educational resources.<p></p>
Funding
National Institutes of Health (NIH), Medical Research Council, Wellcome Trust, Italian Ministry of Health, Istituto di Ricerca Pediatrica Città della Speranza, Fundació CELLEX Barcelona, Fundació Mir-Puig, Agencia Estatal de Investigación, European Commission (TinyBrains, LaserLab), Generalitat de Catalunya (CERCA, AGAUR), ERC Consolidator, FARE, European Union Next Generation EU NRRP M6C2—Investment 2.1 “SYNFONIA”, PRIN 2022, São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP), National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPQ), Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC), Innovate UK, Wellcome Leap, Inc, National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering of the National Institutes of Health (NIBIB), NIH/NINDS, German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (DAIsy project), RWTH Aachen Universty Exploratory Research Space Start-Up (ERS), Doctoral Training Alliance (DTA) Applied Biosciences for Health, Early Career Fellowship Leverhulme Trust, National Institutes of Health, European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme, McDonnell Foundation, NSERC Discovery, Marie Curie Individual Fellowship “BabyMindReader”, CONAHCYT IxM, National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, Junior Principal Investigator (JPI) Fellowship — Federal Government and the Laender, Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship, Brain and Behavior Research Foundation – Young Investigator, National Science Foundation, Presidential Postdoctoral Fellowship – Nanyang Technological University, Singapore
History
Author affiliation
College of Life Sciences
Psychology & Vision Sciences