Functional neuroimaging. Imaging brain function in real time (not just the structure of the brain).

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Functional neuroimaging Imaging brain function in real time (not just the structure of the brain).

The brain is bloody & electric Blood increase in neuronal activity increase in metabolic demand for glucose and oxygen increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF) to the active region Electricity the brain works because neurons communicate with each other and they do this by sending out tiny electrical impulses Blood is an indirect, slow (because blood flows slowly), measure of neural activity. Electricity is a direct measure of neural activity Axon Synapse Dendrites Nucleus Cell body

Non-invasive recording from human brain (Functional brain imaging) Hemodynamic techniques Electro-magnetic techniques Positron emission tomography (PET) Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fmri) Electroencephalography (EEG) Magnetoencephalography (MEG) Excellent spatial resolution (~1-2mm) Poor temporal resolution (~1sec) Poor spatial resolution (esp. EEG) Excellent temporal resolution (<1msec)

Experimental designs for hemodynamic techniques

PET

PET (Positron Emission Tomography) Radioactive labeling of some compound that is familiar to the body (such as glucose or water). The radioactive material is administered to the subject. PET images the electromagnetic radiation induced by the decay of the PET radioisotopes. The chosen radioactive material must have a short half-life (must decay quickly). PET radioisotopes emit a positron (a positively charged electron) in the process of decay. When this positron collides with an electron, the 2 particles annihilate each other, and produce 2 photons traveling in opposite directions. This induces electromagnetic radiation which is what can be detected externally and is used to measure both the quantity and the location of the positron emitter.

PET (Positron Emission Tomography) Dependent measure: regional Cerebral Blood Flow (rcbf). Spatial resolution about 4mm throughout the brain. Temporal resolution very bad (~30-40 sec). Randomization is impossible (trials cannot be distinguished from each other). Blocked design is necessary.

PET scanner

PET pros and cons PRO Very good spatial resolution CONs Basically no temporal resolution Invasive. These days it s hard to get human subjects approval for PET studies, given that noninvasive alternatives exist: fmri (based on MRI).

Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and functional MRI

Basics of MRI Our bodies are mostly water and have a high concentration of hydrogen nuclei. 1. The nuclei of hydrogen atoms (called protons) normally point randomly in different directions. 1.

Basics of MRI Our bodies are mostly water and have a high concentration of hydrogen nuclei. 2. However, when exposed to a strong static magnetic field, the nuclei line up in parallel formation, like rows of tiny magnets. In an MRI set-up, a strong external static magnetic field is applied across the brain in order to line up the hydrogen nuclei. (This field can be up to 80 000 times stronger than the earth s magnetic field.) 1. 2.

Basics of MRI Our bodies are mostly water and have a high concentration of hydrogen nuclei. 3. Then this parallel formation, called equilibrium, is disturbed by sending out radio waves from the MRI machine 1. 3. 2.

Basics of MRI Our bodies are mostly water and have a high concentration of hydrogen nuclei. 4. As the hydrogen nuclei fall back into alignment, they produce a detectable radio signal. MRI signal decay rates (T2s) are different for different biological tissues. For example, tissues that contain little or no hydrogen (such as bone) appear black. Those that contain large amounts of hydrogen (such as the brain) produce a bright image. 1. 2. 3. 4.

Basics of MRI

Functional MRI (fmri) MR has the capability to measure parameters related to several neural physiological functions, including: changes in various metabolic byproducts blood flow blood volume blood oxygenation

Functional MRI (fmri) Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent (BOLD) signal Blood is more oxygenated in an activated region of the brain than in a nonactivated region. Oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin differ in their magnetic susceptibility: Deoxy Hb has a higher magnetization decay rate than does oxy Hb.

Functional MRI (fmri) No radioactive tracers are needed. Spatial resolution: 3-6mm (in most applications). Temporal resolution: in the order of seconds. Fast enough to distinguish between trials (i.e. event-related designs and randomization are possible) Not fast enough to distinguish between the activation patterns associated with different stages of stimulus processing. Hemodynamic lag (3-6 seconds): a: short stimulus b. rise, 6-9 sec c. return to baseline, 8-20sec d. undershoot

The subtraction method

Electromagnetism: Electroencephalography (EEG) and Magnetoencephalography (MEG)

Electromagnetism Millisecond temporal resolution. Neurons communicate with each other thousands of times per second by sending each other tiny electrical impulses Populations of neurons are connected into networks When networks fire in synchrony, the dynamics of the electric activity can be detected and recorded outside the skull.

Main source of the signal: Post-synaptic current flow along the dendrites of (pyramidal) nerve cells

An electric current creates a magnetic field around it. The right-hand rule: When the thumb of the right hand is pointing in the direction of the current, the fingers of the right hand curl in the direction of the magnetic field

Electromagnetism EEG (electroencephalography): electric potentials MEG (magnetoencephalography): magnetic fields MEG EEG

EEG electrodes on the scalp MEG sensors outside the head, in a tank containing liquid helium to enhance superconductivity Source: http://www.allgpsy.unizh.ch/graduate/mat/180102/lecture1.pdf

MEG signal is dominated by currents oriented tangential to the skull. Source: http://www.allgpsy.unizh.ch/graduate/mat/180102/lecture1.pdf

EEG picks up tangentially and radially oriented currents equally. Currents oriented perfectly radial to the skull are missed in MEG. But there is very little signal that is so perfectly radial. Source: http://www.allgpsy.unizh.ch/graduate/mat/180102/lecture1.pdf

MEG EEG

http://neurocog.psy.tufts.edu/images/erp_technique.gif

http://neurocog.psy.tufts.edu/images/erp_technique.gif

Averaging http://neurocog.psy.tufts.edu/images/erp_averaging.gif

Labelling of ERP components (warning: a bit confusing) P or N: whether the component is negative or positive going. Number after the letter: indicates the approximate peak latency of the components. 1, 2, 3, etc. are short for 100ms, 200ms, 300ms and so forth. Traditionally, negative is plotted up and positive down. http://neurocog.psy.tufts.edu/images/erp_components.gif

Temporal and spatial resolution of EEG Millisecond temporal resolution. Localization of neural generators complicated (and usually not done). Different tissues and the skull differ in their conductivity: Electric potentials do not pass through these structures undistorted. Localization requires realistic head models.

MEG Main advantage over EEG: better spatial resolution (millimeters for cortex, worse for deeper sources) Magnetic fields pass through skull and various tissues undistorted. Distribution of the magnetic field around the head tells you a lot about the underlying current generators. MEG EEG

The magnetic fields generated by neural activity are 100 million times smaller than the earth's magnetic field and 1 million times smaller than the magnetic fields produced in an urban environment.

How to capture the tiny signal Superconductive sensors Reference channels Magnetically shielded room

Reference channels Placed somewhere close to the head but far enough to not measure any brain activity. Signal measured by the reference channel subtracted from the raw data usually online during acquisition.

Magnetically shielded room (MSR)

Magnetically shielded room (MSR)

Source: http://www.allgpsy.unizh.ch/graduate/mat/180102/lecture1.pdf

An averaged response to a 1kHz tone Magnetic field at 110ms = auditory M100

Labelling of MEG response components M50, M100, M250, etc M = magnetic Like in ERPs,, the number refers to the approximate peak latency of the components

MEG components elicited by visual words Averaged response to visual words M100 100-150ms M170 150-200ms M250 200-300ms M350 300-400ms 100 170 250 350 We can analyze: - either the sensor data (on the left) - or the activity of the currents underlying the magnetic fields. The locations and orientations of these currents have to be modeled on the basis of the magnetic field distribution. - Estimating the current source that generates a given magnetic field is called the inverse problem

The single dipole model A discrete source model. Assumes that activity is generated not by a patch of cortex, but by point source. A good way to reduce the spatial dimensionality of the data. Each dipole acts as a spatial filter on the data.

MEG components elicited by visual words Dipole models Averaged response to visual words 100 170 250 350 M100 M170 M250 M350 100-150ms 150-200ms 200-300ms 300-400ms