Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

Toward discovery science of human brain function

Although it is being successfully implemented for exploration of the genome, discovery science has eluded the functional neuroimaging community. The core challenge remains the development of common paradigms for interrogating the myriad functional systems in the brain without the constraints of a priori hypotheses. Resting-state functional MRI (R-fMRI) constitutes a candidate approach capable of addressing this challenge. Imaging the brain during rest reveals large-amplitude spontaneous low-frequency (www.nitrc.org/projects/fcon_1000/.

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

Mapping brain networks in awake mice using combined optical neural control and fMRI

Behaviors and brain disorders involve neural circuits that are widely distributed in the brain. The ability to map the functional connectivity of distributed circuits, and to assess how this connectivity evolves over time, will be facilitated by methods for characterizing the network impact of activating a specific subcircuit, cell type, or projection pathway.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Neurophysiol

Cortical surface shape analysis based on spherical wavelets

In vivo quantification of neuroanatomical shape variations is possible due to recent advances in medical imaging and has proven useful in the study of neuropathology and neurodevelopment. In this paper, we apply a spherical wavelet transformation to extract shape features of cortical surfaces reconstructed from magnetic resonance images (MRIs) of a set of subjects. The spherical wavelet transformation can characterize the underlying functions in a local fashion in both space and frequency, in contrast to spherical harmonics that have a global basis set.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
IEEE Trans Med Imaging

Evidence for neural effects of repetition that directly correlate with behavioral priming

Stimulus repetition associates with neural activity reductions during tasks that elicit behavioral priming. Here we present direct evidence for a quantitative relation between neural activity reductions and behavioral priming. Fifty-four subjects performed a word classification task while being scanned with functional MRI. Activity reductions were found in multiple high-level cortical regions including those within the prefrontal cortex.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Cogn Neurosci

Orthographic distinctiveness and semantic elaboration provide separate contributions to memory

Orthographic distinctiveness and semantic elaboration both enhance memory. The present behavioral and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies examined the relationship between the influences of orthographic distinctiveness and semantic elaboration on memory, and explored whether they make independent contributions. As is typical for manipulations of processing levels, words studied during semantic encoding were better remembered than words studied during nonsemantic encoding.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Cogn Neurosci

Intrinsic functional connectivity as a tool for human connectomics: theory, properties, and optimization

Resting state functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI) is widely used to investigate brain networks that exhibit correlated fluctuations. While fcMRI does not provide direct measurement of anatomic connectivity, accumulating evidence suggests it is sufficiently constrained by anatomy to allow the architecture of distinct brain systems to be characterized.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Neurophysiol

Human brain activity time-locked to perceptual event boundaries

Temporal structure has a major role in human understanding of everyday events. Observers are able to segment ongoing activity into temporal parts and sub-parts that are reliable, meaningful and correlated with ecologically relevant features of the action. Here we present evidence that a network of brain regions is tuned to perceptually salient event boundaries, both during intentional event segmentation and during naive passive viewing of events. Activity within this network may provide a basis for parsing the temporally evolving environment into meaningful units.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Nat Neurosci

Building memories: remembering and forgetting of verbal experiences as predicted by brain activity

A fundamental question about human memory is why some experiences are remembered whereas others are forgotten. Brain activation during word encoding was measured using blocked and event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to examine how neural activation differs for subsequently remembered and subsequently forgotten experiences. Results revealed that the ability to later remember a verbal experience is predicted by the magnitude of activation in left prefrontal and temporal cortices during that experience.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Science

Functional brain imaging of young, nondemented, and demented older adults

Brain imaging based on functional MRI (fMRI) provides a powerful tool for characterizing age-related changes in functional anatomy. However, between-population comparisons confront potential differences in measurement properties. The present experiment explores the feasibility of conducting fMRI studies in nondemented and demented older adults by measuring hemodynamic response properties in an event-related design.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Cogn Neurosci

Functional neuroimaging studies of encoding, priming, and explicit memory retrieval

Human functional neuroimaging techniques provide a powerful means of linking neural level descriptions of brain function and cognition. The exploration of the functional anatomy underlying human memory comprises a prime example. Three highly reliable findings linking memory-related cognitive processes to brain activity are discussed. First, priming is accompanied by reductions in the amount of neural activation relative to naive or unprimed task performance.

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

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