“…Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used to investigate changes in regional brain volumes, perfusion, structural connectivity [derived using diffusion‐weighted MRI (dMRI)], and functional connectivity in participants exposed to RHI. For instance, various structural neuroimaging studies of RHI due to combat sports and in veterans with blast injuries have shown changes in various gray matter volumes such as thalamus, ventromedial prefrontal cortices, right fusiform gyrus, and frontotemporolimbic regions involving hippocampus, medial temporal lobe, and frontal lobes (Bernick et al, ; Bigler, ; Gooijers et al, ; Lopez‐Larson et al, ; Mishra et al, , ; Montenigro, Bernick, & Cantu, ; Ng et al, ). Similarly, voxelwise dMRI‐derived measures such as fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) have shown differences in the temporo‐occipital white matter tracts and forceps major (Hulkower, Poliak, Rosenbaum, Zimmerman, & Lipton, ; Mishra et al, ; Ng et al, ; Orrison et al, ; Shin et al, ; Wintermark, Sanelli, Anzai, Tsiouris, & Whitlow, ; Zhang et al, ; Zhang, Heier, Zimmerman, Jordan, & Ulug, ).…”