Shmuel Amir, Leopold David A
Montreal Neurological Institute, Departments of Neurology and Neurosurgery and Biomedical Engineering, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
Hum Brain Mapp. 2008 Jul;29(7):751-61. doi: 10.1002/hbm.20580.
Recent studies have demonstrated large amplitude spontaneous fluctuations in functional-MRI (fMRI) signals in humans in the resting state. Importantly, these spontaneous fluctuations in blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) signal are often synchronized over distant parts of the brain, a phenomenon termed functional-connectivity. Functional-connectivity is widely assumed to reflect interregional coherence of fluctuations in activity of the underlying neuronal networks. Despite the large body of human imaging literature on spontaneous activity and functional-connectivity in the resting state, the link to underlying neural activity remains tenuous. Through simultaneous fMRI and intracortical neurophysiological recording, we demonstrate correlation between slow fluctuations in BOLD signals and concurrent fluctuations in the underlying locally measured neuronal activity. This correlation varied with time-lag of BOLD relative to neuronal activity, resembling a traditional hemodynamic response function with peaks at approximately 6 s lag of BOLD signal. The correlations were reliably detected when the neuronal signal consisted of either the spiking rate of a small group of neurons, or relative power changes in the multi-unit activity band, and particularly in the local field potential gamma band. Analysis of correlation between the voxel-by-voxel fMRI time-series and the neuronal activity measured within one cortical site showed patterns of correlation that slowly traversed cortex. BOLD fluctuations in widespread areas in visual cortex of both hemispheres were significantly correlated with neuronal activity from a single recording site in V1. To the extent that our V1 findings can be generalized to other cortical areas, fMRI-based functional-connectivity between remote regions in the resting state can be linked to synchronization of slow fluctuations in the underlying neuronal signals.
最近的研究表明,人类在静息状态下功能磁共振成像(fMRI)信号存在大幅度的自发波动。重要的是,这些血氧水平依赖(BOLD)信号的自发波动通常在大脑的不同区域同步,这种现象被称为功能连接。人们普遍认为功能连接反映了潜在神经网络活动波动的区域间一致性。尽管有大量关于静息状态下自发活动和功能连接的人类影像学文献,但与潜在神经活动的联系仍然不紧密。通过同时进行fMRI和皮层内神经生理学记录,我们证明了BOLD信号的缓慢波动与潜在局部测量的神经元活动的同步波动之间存在相关性。这种相关性随BOLD相对于神经元活动的时间延迟而变化,类似于传统的血液动力学反应函数,在BOLD信号延迟约6秒时达到峰值。当神经元信号由一小群神经元的放电率或多单位活动频段(特别是局部场电位γ频段)的相对功率变化组成时,能够可靠地检测到这种相关性。对体素级fMRI时间序列与一个皮层位点内测量的神经元活动之间的相关性分析显示,相关性模式在皮层中缓慢移动。两个半球视觉皮层广泛区域的BOLD波动与V1区单个记录位点的神经元活动显著相关。就我们在V1区的发现能够推广到其他皮层区域而言,静息状态下远程区域基于fMRI的功能连接可以与潜在神经元信号的缓慢波动同步相联系。