<<Up     Contents

Functional magnetic resonance imaging

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (or fMRI) is the process of using MRI scanners to obtain information about the activity occurring inside the brain.

As neurons fire, they metabolyse oxygen from the surrounding blood. Approximately 6 seconds after a burst of neural activity, a haemodynamic response[?] occurs in which that region of the brain is infused with oxygen-rich blood.

Because oxygenated haemoglobin is diamagnetic, while deoxygenated blood is paramagnetic, MRI is able to detect a small difference (a signal of the order of 3%) between the two. This is called a blood-oxygen level dependent, or "BOLD" signal. The precise nature of the relationship between neural activity and the BOLD signal is a subject of current research.

BOLD effects are measured using a T2[?] imaging process, which is different from the T1[?] scan taken in ordinary structural MRI images (the former measures the rate of change of spin phases, while the later detects the half-life of inverted spins). T2 images can be aquired with moderately good spatial and temporal resolution; scans are usually repeated every 2-5 seconds, and the voxels in the resulting image tend to be around 0.25 cubic centimeters. Other non-invasive functional medical imaging techniques can improve on one of these figures, but not both.

The science of applying fMRI is quite complicated and multi-disciplinary. It involves:

Aside from BOLD fMRI there are other ways to probe the brain activity with MRI:

The signal associated with these kind of contrast agents are proportional to the cerebral blood volume[?].

wikipedia.org dumped 2003-03-17 with terodump