University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany.
Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2011 Mar-Apr;25(3):259-67. doi: 10.1177/1545968310385128.
Studies with real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) demonstrate that humans volitionally regulate hemodynamic signals from circumscribed regions of the brain, leading to area-specific behavioral consequences. Methods to better determine the nature of dynamic functional interactions between different brain regions and plasticity due to self-regulation training are still in development.
The authors investigated changes in brain states while training 6 healthy participants to self-regulate insular cortex by real-time fMRI feedback.
The authors used multivariate pattern analysis to observe spatial pattern changes and a multivariate Granger causality model to show changes in temporal interactions in multiple brain areas over the course of 5 repeated scans per subject during positive and negative emotional imagery with feedback about the level of insular activation.
Feedback training leads to more spatially focused recruitment of areas relevant for learning and emotion. Effective connectivity analysis reveals that initial training is associated with an increase in network density; further training "prunes" presumably redundant connections and "strengthens" relevant connections.
The authors demonstrate the application of multivariate methods for assessing cerebral reorganization during the learning of volitional control of local brain activity. The findings provide insight into mechanisms of training-induced learning techniques for rehabilitation. The authors anticipate that future studies, specifically designed with this hypothesis in mind, may be able to construct a universal index of cerebral reorganization during skill learning based on multiple similar criteria across various skilled tasks. These techniques may be able to discern recovery from compensation, dose-response curves related to training, and ways to determine whether rehabilitation training is actively engaging necessary networks.
使用实时功能磁共振成像(fMRI)的研究表明,人类可以主动调节大脑特定区域的血液动力学信号,从而产生特定于区域的行为后果。目前仍在开发更好地确定不同大脑区域之间动态功能相互作用的性质以及由于自我调节训练而产生的可塑性的方法。
作者通过实时 fMRI 反馈,研究了 6 名健康参与者在训练中自我调节脑岛皮层时大脑状态的变化。
作者使用多元模式分析来观察空间模式变化,使用多元 Granger 因果模型来显示在 5 次重复扫描过程中多个脑区的时间相互作用变化,每个受试者在进行正性和负性情绪想象时都有反馈有关岛叶激活水平。
反馈训练导致与学习和情绪相关的区域更有针对性地招募。有效连接分析表明,初始训练与网络密度的增加有关;进一步的训练“修剪”了可能冗余的连接,并“增强”了相关的连接。
作者证明了多元方法在评估自愿控制局部脑活动学习过程中的大脑重组的应用。研究结果为康复训练中基于训练的学习技术的机制提供了深入的了解。作者预计,未来的研究,特别是在这一假设的基础上设计的研究,可能能够基于多个类似标准构建各种熟练任务期间大脑重组的通用指标。这些技术可以辨别恢复和补偿,与训练相关的剂量反应曲线,以及确定康复训练是否积极参与必要的网络的方法。