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Neuroimaging Methods: Visualising the brain & its injuries • Structural (brain structure) – X-rays – CT (Computer Tomography) – MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) • Functional (brain function) – Blood flow (PET/SPECT/fMRI). – Neuron’s electrical responses (EEG/EEG) – Special thanks to Chris Rorden, U. South Carolina Structural: X-rays • X-ray tube projects through head • Detector plate measures transmission of X-rays – Bone relatively opaque to X-rays – Soft tissue relatively transparent • Use: – broken bones – Angiography • Not good for much else Structural: CT scans A series of X-rays are taken at different angles – Computer reconstructs 2D slices Uses: – Stroke – Brain tumors (larger than 2-4 mm) – – – Enhanced with contrast material Subdural Hematoma Evaluation of traumatic Head Injury CT scan Contrast No Contrast • Plain film • CT • Rendered CT MRI • Magnetic resonance imaging • Does not expose individual to X-rays How does MRI work? A compass analogy N Spin of H atoms aligns with static magnetic field Compass needle points North Briefly put magnet on right side: needle points East After magnet is removed, needle points North again (lower energy state) Needles in different fluids will take different time to return to North N N Briefly apply radiofrequency pulse: spin tipped After RF pulse, H atoms realign (lower energy state) Atoms in different tissues (fat, muscle, etc) require different time to realign (relax). MRI scans Healthy enlarged ventricles & wide sulci MCA infarct Types of MRI scan • T1 (anatomical): – fast to acquire, – good detail (e.g. white and gray matter). • T2 (pathological): – slower to acquire, thus worse resolution. – Excellent for finding lesions. Functional imaging: Measures brain activity • PET (Positron Emission Tomography • SPECT (Single Photon Emission Computerized Tomography) • Radioactive oxygen isotope injected into blood • Brain regions that use oxygen emit more positrons functional: fMRI • fMRI: Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging - Increase activity in certain brain area Blood vessels dilate The % of Oxygen in the blood in that area is changed The MR machine registers that Functional: Electroencephalogram (EEG) • Measures electrical activity • Useful for studying ‘sleep’ - • When neurons fire, they create electical dipoles. • Neurons aligned perpendicular to cortical surface. + Event related potentials (ERPs) • ERPs are a type of EEG – Continuously collect EEGs – Present many trials of stimuli (words: neutral vs. offensive) – Compute average brain response to stimuli • Good temporal resolution • Poor Spatial resolution Signal V (when activity starts happening). + _ 0 neutral ‘rape’ 100 200 300 Time (ms) http://brainserver.psych.indiana.edu/ In sum, • Structural (brain structure) – X-rays – CT (Computer Tomography) – MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging) • Functional (brain function) – Blood flow (PET/SPECT/fMRI). – Neuron’s electrical responses (EEG/EEG) – Neuron’s magnetic responses (MEG)