Logothetis Nikos K, Pfeuffer Josef
Department Physiology of Cognitive Processes, Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics, Spemannstrasse 38, 72076 Tübingen, Germany.
Magn Reson Imaging. 2004 Dec;22(10):1517-31. doi: 10.1016/j.mri.2004.10.018.
Since its development about 15 years ago, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has become the leading research tool for mapping brain activity. The technique works by detecting the levels of oxygen in the blood, point by point, throughout the brain. In other words, it relies on a surrogate signal, resulting from changes in oxygenation, blood volume and flow, and does not directly measure neural activity. Although a relationship between changes in brain activity and blood flow has long been speculated, indirectly examined and suggested and surely anticipated and expected, the neural basis of the fMRI signal was only recently demonstrated directly in experiments using combined imaging and intracortical recordings. In the present paper, we discuss the results obtained from such combined experiments. We also discuss our current knowledge of the extracellularly measured signals of the neural processes that they represent and of the structural and functional neurovascular coupling, which links such processes with the hemodynamic changes that offer the surrogate signal that we use to map brain activity. We conclude by considering applications of invasive MRI, including injections of paramagnetic tracers for the study of connectivity in the living animal and simultaneous imaging and electrical microstimulation.
自约15年前发展以来,功能磁共振成像(fMRI)已成为绘制大脑活动的主要研究工具。该技术通过逐点检测全脑血液中的氧气水平来工作。换句话说,它依赖于由氧合、血容量和血流变化产生的替代信号,而不直接测量神经活动。尽管大脑活动变化与血流之间的关系早已被推测、间接研究、暗示,并且肯定是被预期和期望的,但fMRI信号的神经基础直到最近才在使用联合成像和皮质内记录的实验中直接得到证实。在本文中,我们讨论了从这类联合实验中获得的结果。我们还讨论了我们目前对它们所代表的神经过程的细胞外测量信号以及结构和功能神经血管耦合的认识,这种耦合将这些过程与血流动力学变化联系起来,而血流动力学变化提供了我们用于绘制大脑活动的替代信号。我们通过考虑侵入性MRI的应用来得出结论,包括注射顺磁性示踪剂以研究活体动物的连通性以及同时进行成像和电微刺激。