Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)

A preliminary morphometric magnetic resonance imaging study of regional brain volumes in body dysmorphic disorder

Morphometric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was used to compare regional brain volumes in eight women with body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) and eight healthy comparison subjects. The BDD group exhibited a relative leftward shift in caudate asymmetry and greater total white matter vs. the comparison group. Findings with respect to the caudate nucleus are consistent with both the conceptualization of BDD as an obsessive-compulsive spectrum disorder, and the 'striatal topography model' of obsessive-compulsive disorders.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Psychiatry Res

Neuroimaging and neurocircuitry models pertaining to the neurosurgical treatment of psychiatric disorders

Neurocircuitry models of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and major depression (MD) are described, focusing on relevant supporting neuroimaging data. Corticostriatothalamocortical circuitry is implicated in OCD. In MD, the relation between "dorsal" and "ventral" cortical compartments is emphasized; the amygdala, hippocampus, and pregenual anterior cingulate are implicated in the pathophysiology of MD and are potential targets for treatment. The neuroanatomy of psychiatric neurosurgical procedures and related neuroimaging findings are reviewed.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neurosurg Clin N Am

Functional response of tumor vasculature to PaCO2: determination of total and microvascular blood volume by MRI

In order to identify differences in functional activity, we compared the reactivity of glioma vasculature and the native cerebral vasculature to both dilate and constrict in response to altered P(a)CO(2). Gliomas were generated by unilateral implantation of U87MGdEGFR human glioma tumor cells into the striatum of adult female athymic rats. Relative changes in total and microvascular cerebral blood volume were determined by steady state contrast agent-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging for transitions from normocarbia to hypercarbia and hypocarbia.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neoplasia

Neuroimaging of direction-selective mechanisms for second-order motion

Psychophysical findings have revealed a functional segregation of processing for 1st-order motion (movement of luminance modulation) and 2nd-order motion (e.g., movement of contrast modulation). However neural correlates of this psychophysical distinction remain controversial.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Neurophysiol

Feeling-of-knowing in episodic memory: an event-related fMRI study

An individual may fail to recall an item from memory but still feel that it would be recognized on a later test, a retrieval state termed the "feeling-of-knowing" (FOK). In this study we used event-related fMRI and the FOK to examine both encoding- and retrieval-related factors that are associated with different levels of recall performance: successful retrieval of a previously studied item, retrieval failure accompanied by the FOK, and retrieval failure without any FOK.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroimage

Identifying regional activity associated with temporally separated components of working memory using event-related functional MRI

This study describes the neural circuitry underlying temporally separated components of working memory (WM) performance-stimulus encoding, maintenance of information during a delay, and the response to a probe. While other studies have applied event-related fMRI to separate epochs of WM tasks, this study differs in that it employs a methodology that does not make any a priori assumptions about the shape of the hemodynamic response (HDR). This is important because no one model of the HDR is valid across the range of activated brain regions and stimulus types.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroimage

Prefrontal cortex dysfunction during working memory performance in schizophrenia: reconciling discrepant findings

Working memory (WM) deficits are a persistent, disabling and relatively treatment-resistant feature of schizophrenia that may underlie many cognitive deficits and symptoms. They are associated with prefrontal cortex dysfunction. While most neuroimaging studies of WM demonstrate "task-related hypofrontality" in schizophrenic relative to healthy subjects, several recent studies have reported equal or increased prefrontal activity. These findings challenge central assumptions regarding cognitive deficits and prefrontal cortex dysfunction in schizophrenia.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Schizophr Res

Human cerebellum: surface-assisted cortical parcellation and volumetry with magnetic resonance imaging

We describe a system of surface-assisted parcellation (SAP) of the human cerebellar cortex derived from neural systems functional and behavioral anatomy. This system is based on MRI and preserves the unique morphologic and topographic features of the individual cerebellum.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
J Cogn Neurosci

Multivariate analysis of neuronal interactions in the generalized partial least squares framework: simulations and empirical studies

Identification of spatiotemporal interactions within/between neuron populations is critical for detection and characterization of large-scale neuronal interactions underlying perception, cognition, and behavior. Univariate analysis has been employed successfully in many neuroimaging studies. However, univariate analysis does not explicitly test for interactions between distributed areas of activity and is not sensitive to distributed responses across the brain.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Neuroimage

Degenerate mode birdcage volume coil for sensitivity-encoded imaging

A volume birdcage coil for accelerated image encoding with parallel acquisition methods such as SENSE is demonstrated. The coil is degenerately tuned with both the standard homogeneous mode and the first gradient mode of the birdcage coil resonant at the Larmor frequency. Conventional and antisymmetric coupling structures allow imaging from each of these modes simultaneously. The coil for SENSE-type reconstruction with acceleration factors of up to 2-fold is demonstrated.

Publication Type: 
Journal Articles
Journal: 
Magn Reson Med

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