Title: Behavioral Neuroscience
1 Behavioral Neuroscience Neurology
- Lesion studies
- Animals
- Patient case studies
- Phineas Gage
- H.M.
- Single cell recordings
- Behavioral studies
- TMS (Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation)
- Creating artificial temporary lesions in the
brain
2Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS)
3Cognitive Neuroscience
- STRUCTURAL Neuroimaging
- CT (Computerized Tomography)
- MRI (Magnetic resonance imaging)
- 3-D combine x-ray or MRI slices
- FUNCTIONAL Neuroimaging
- EEG (Topography) 1929
- MEG (Magnetoencephalogram)
- PET (Positron Emission Tomography 1970s)
- cerebral glucose levels
- high spatial resolution but low temporal and
invasive - fMRI (functional MRI) 1990s
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5functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI)
- Measures cerebral hemodynamic response (BOLD
signal) - Blood flow in brain levels of oxygen in
(deoxy)hemoglobin recruited by firing neurons - Structure AND function in single scan
- High spatial resolution with modest temporal
resolution - Problem loud scanner noises, machine artifacts
6 MRI physics
7Conventional MRI
white matter
gray matter
- MRI is sensitive to myelin
8HIGH Spatial Resolution of MRI
Histology
MRI
Layer IV
9 MRI vs. fMRI
MRI - shows difference between different types of
tissues (difference in space, e.g. white vs.
gray matter)
- fMRI
- shows difference between stimulated and
non-stimulated tissue (difference in time)
10 What is functional MRI (fMRI)?
Stimulus Off (Condition 1)
T2 (tissue at rest)
MR signal
time
fMRI detects subtractive difference in signal
(?S Cond. 2-Cond.1) fMRI is indirect
(hemodynamic) method of cellular communication
11Structural MRI Functional MRI
Anatomical MRI (T1-weighted)
12Spatio - temporal scales
MEG / EEG
Spatial Resolution (mm)
PET
fMRI
Single / Multi Unit Recording
1 msec 1 sec 1 min
10 min 1 hour
Temporal Resolution (sec)
- Why fMRI?
- non-invasive gt can be used in humans
- measures population neural activity
- can study whole brain at once
13MRI scanner
- Magnetic field
- is VERY STRONG ( 3T 30,000 times the earths
magnetic field) - is ALWAYS ON
14Image Artifacts and Subject Safety
15Typical fMRI experiment
Stimulus
Stimulus
Stimulus
Stimulus
Off
Off
On
On
(30 s)
(30 s)
(30 s)
(30 s)
.
.
.
- Stimulus (e.g. music) is presented to subject
repeatedly every 30 sec. - Images are acquired 2 sec.
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16Scanner Noise
- Scanner noise sources
- scanner cooling system (ongoing)
- gradient coils (every image acquisition)
- Noise is a PROBLEM
- want response to stimulus, get response to
stimulusscanner noise - scanner noise reduces dynamic range of response
- scanner noise masks stimulus
- Solutions
- blocking noise transmission to the subject
(earplugs, earmuffs) - modifying scanner
- modifying experiment
17Subcortical Activation
MGB
IC
SOC
CN
18Inferior Colliculus
(sound intensity varied)
75 dB SL
55 dB SL
35 dB SL
Inferior Colliculi
1
19Auditory Cortex
auditory cortex
20Millisecond changes in electrophysiology (ERPs)
21Functional Neuroimaging Resolution
Spatial Temporal
EEG/MEG 1-3 cm2 1 ms
PET 3 mm3 20 s ( 3-8 s lag)
fMRI 1 mm3 2 s ( lag of 3-8 s)
22Dis/Advantages of each technique
23Mind vs Brain
24- VHS 1518.25 Dr Phil- Cognitive Neuroscience