Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Functional study of the brain by NMR

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Cereb Blood Flow Metab

Functional magnetic resonance imaging

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Acad Radiol

Changes in cortical activity during mental rotation. A mapping study using functional MRI

Mental imagery is an important cognitive method for problem solving, and the mental rotation of complex objects, as originally described by Shepard and Metzler (1971), is among the best studied mental imagery tasks. Functional MRI was used to observe focal changes in blood flow in the brains of 10 healthy volunteers performing a mental rotation task. On each trial, subjects viewed a pair of perspective drawings of three-dimensional shapes, mentally rotated one into congruence with the other, and then determined whether the two forms were identical or mirror-images.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Brain

Functional magnetic resonance imaging shows localized brain activation during serial transcranial stimulation in man

Area and depth penetration of transcranial stimulation methods such as transcranial electrical stimulation (TES) are poorly defined. We investigated the feasibility of a simultaneous TES and fMRI measurement. The aim was to compare the signal intensity changes measured using BOLD fMRI during sequential finger movement with the signal response during artificial transcranial stimulation. Tes induced contralateral finger contractions and in T2* weighted images a transient signal increase was observed in the area underlying the electrodes.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroreport

Location of language in the cortex: a comparison between functional MR imaging and electrocortical stimulation

PURPOSE: To determine the accuracy of functional MR imaging in locating language areas for planning surgical resection.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
AJNR Am J Neuroradiol

Functional organization of spatial and nonspatial working memory processing within the human lateral frontal cortex

The present study used functional magnetic resonance imaging to demonstrate that performance of visual spatial and visual nonspatial working memory tasks involve the same regions of the lateral prefrontal cortex when all factors unrelated to the type of stimulus material are appropriately controlled.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A

Auditory and visual word processing studied with fMRI

Brain activations associated with semantic processing of visual and auditory words were investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). For each form of word presentation, subjects performed two tasks: one semantic, and one nonsemantic. The semantic task was identical for both auditory and visual presentation: single words were presented and subjects determined whether the word was concrete or abstract. In the nonsemantic task for auditory words, subjects determined whether the word had one syllable or multiple syllables.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Hum Brain Mapp

Location of human face-selective cortex with respect to retinotopic areas

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) was used to identify a small area in the human posterior fusiform gyrus that responds selectively to faces (PF). In the same subjects, phase-encoded rotating and expanding checkerboards were used with fMRI to identify the retinotopic visual areas V1, V2, V3, V3A, VP and V4v. PF was found to lie anterior to area V4v, with a small gap present between them. Further recordings in some of the same subjects used moving low-contrast rings to identify the visual motion area MT. PF was found to lie ventral to MT.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Hum Brain Mapp

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