Turner R, Howseman A, Rees G E, Josephs O, Friston K
The Wellcome Department of Cognitive Neurology, Institute of Neurology, London, UK.
Exp Brain Res. 1998 Nov;123(1-2):5-12. doi: 10.1007/s002210050538.
It is now feasible to create spatial maps of activity in the human brain completely non-invasively using magnetic resonance imaging. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images in which the spin magnetization is refocussed by gradient switching are sensitive to local changes in magnetic susceptibility, which can occur when the oxygenation state of blood changes. Cortical neural activity causes increases in blood flow, which usually result in changes in blood oxygenation. Hence changes of image intensity can be observed, given rise to the so-called Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent (BOLD) contrast technique. Use of echo-planar imaging methods (EPI) allows the monitoring over the entire brain of such changes in real time. A temporal resolution of 1-3 s, and a spatial resolution of 2 mm in-plane, can thus be obtained. Generally in a brain mapping experiment hundred of brain image volumes are acquired at repeat times of 1-6 s, while brain tasks are performed. The data are transformed into statistical maps of image difference, using the technique known as statistical parametric mapping (SPM). This method, based on robust multilinear regression techniques, has become the method of reference for analysis of positron emission tomography (PET) image data. The special characteristics of functional MRI data require some modification of SPM algorithms and strategies, and the MRI data must be gaussianized in time and space to conform to the assumptions of the statistics of Gaussian random fields. The steps of analysis comprise: removal of head movement effects, spatial smoothing, and statistical interference, which includes temporal smoothing and removal by fitting of temporal variations slower than the experimental paradigm. By these means, activation maps can be generated with great flexibility and statistical power, giving probability estimates for activated brain regions based on intensity or spatial extent, or both combined. Recent studies have shown that patterns of activation obtained in human brain for a given stimulus are independent of the order and spatial orientation with which MRI images are acquired, and hence that inflow effects are not important for EPI data with a TR much longer than T1.
现在,使用磁共振成像完全非侵入性地创建人类大脑活动的空间图谱是可行的。在通过梯度切换重新聚焦自旋磁化的磁共振成像(MRI)图像中,对磁化率的局部变化敏感,当血液的氧合状态发生变化时就会出现这种变化。皮质神经活动会导致血流量增加,这通常会导致血液氧合的变化。因此,可以观察到图像强度的变化,从而产生所谓的血氧水平依赖(BOLD)对比技术。使用回波平面成像方法(EPI)可以实时监测整个大脑的此类变化。因此,可以获得1 - 3秒的时间分辨率和2毫米的平面空间分辨率。通常在脑图谱实验中,在执行脑任务时,以1 - 6秒的重复时间采集数百个脑图像体积。使用称为统计参数映射(SPM)的技术将数据转换为图像差异的统计图。这种基于稳健多线性回归技术的方法已成为正电子发射断层扫描(PET)图像数据分析的参考方法。功能MRI数据的特殊特性需要对SPM算法和策略进行一些修改,并且MRI数据必须在时间和空间上进行高斯化,以符合高斯随机场统计的假设。分析步骤包括:去除头部运动效应、空间平滑和统计干扰,其中统计干扰包括时间平滑以及通过拟合比实验范式慢的时间变化来去除。通过这些方法,可以非常灵活地生成激活图并具有统计功效,根据强度或空间范围或两者结合给出激活脑区的概率估计。最近的研究表明,对于给定刺激在人类大脑中获得的激活模式与采集MRI图像的顺序和空间方向无关,因此对于TR远长于T1的EPI数据,流入效应并不重要。