Patient motion is the largest physiological effect that causes artifacts, often resulting from involuntary movements (e.g. respiration,
cardiac motion and blood
flow, eye movements and swallowing) and minor subject movements.
Movement of the object being imaged during the sequence results in inconsistencies
in phase and
amplitude, which lead to
blurring and ghosting. The nature of the
artifact depends on the timing of the motion with respect to the acquisition. Causes of motion artifacts can also be mechanical vibrations,
cryogen boiling, large iron objects moving in the
fringe field (e.g. an elevator), loose connections anywhere, pulse timing variations, as well as sample motion. These artifacts appear in the
phase encoding direction, independent of the direction of the motion.