functional mri: techniques and applicationsfunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fmri) • mri...

79
Functional MRI: techniques and applications Susan Bookheimer, Ph.D. UCLA Center for Cognitive Neurosciences

Upload: others

Post on 24-May-2020

10 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Functional MRI: techniques and applications

Susan Bookheimer, Ph.D.

UCLA Center for Cognitive Neurosciences

Page 2: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Disclosures

• none

Page 3: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Outline

• Basis of fMRI signal; how it works, what it

measures

• fMRI experimental design

• New techniques

• Clinical applications

• Research applications

Page 4: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Introduction to Functional

Imaging

• Neurovascular Coupling: Increased local

brain activity leads to:

– Increased glucose utilization

– Increased cerebral blood flow

– Increased cerebral blood volume

– Minimal increase in oxygen utilization

– Increased deoxyhemoglobin concentration

Page 5: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Functional Magnetic Resonance

Imaging (FMRI)

• MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure)

• An indirect measure of increased regional

cerebral blood flow during neural activity

• During increased brain activity, MRI signal

intensity (“brightness”) increases with the

increase in oxyhemoglobin concentration

• Tells us which brain regions are “working”

during task performance

Page 6: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Principles of fMRI

• Indirect measure of blood flow

– Measures changes in magnetic susceptibility due

to change in ratio of oxygenated vs. deoxygenated

blood that accompanies increased neural activity

• Relative measure

– change across states (rest, activity) of arbitrary

units of signal intensity

Page 7: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Change in oxyhemoglobin concentration

during increase blood flow

Page 8: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Visual Stimulation in Occipital cortex

Page 9: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Time Series analysis: Changes in

MRI signal intensity during activation

Page 10: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Assumptions in fMRI

• Assumes relatively intact blood flow

response

• Permits relative, activation based

measurements only

• Requires adequate task performance

Page 11: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

fMRI techniques

• Fast- scanning: Echoplanar (EPI) imaging

– Gradient echo EPI: susceptibility weighted

– Spin echo or asymmetric spin echo EPI

– Spiral

– Arterial spin labeling

Page 12: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Hemodynamic response to

activation tasks

Page 13: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Image processing

• Image reconstruction into a time series of

volumes

• Test the extent to which the MR signal

intensity conforms to the predicted

hemodynamic response

• Present results in an accessible format

Page 14: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Practical issues

• Getting people in the scanner

• Stimulus presentation

• Head motion

– restraint

– Mathematical correction (eg AIR)

Page 15: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

MRI Scanner

Page 16: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

MRI Compatible Video Goggles

Page 17: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Conceptual and methodogical

aspects of experimental design • There are two aspects of fMRI design that are important to

distinguish

• Conceptual design

– How do we design tasks to properly measure the processes of interest?

– The issues here are very similar to those in cognitive psychology

• Methodological design

– How can we construct a task paradigm to optimize our ability to measure the effects of interest, within the specific constraints of the fMRI scanning environment?

Page 18: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

fMRI experimental design: A basic plan

Define mental process

to examine

Define tasks to manipulate

that process

Measure fMRI data

during tasks

Compare fMRI data

between tasks

Page 19: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Control

Ex B

Ex A - }

- }

Hierarchical Common

baseline

Ex B Ex A

Control

Parallel

Ex B Ex A

Ex A Ex B >

>

Parametric

A< A < A < A

Tailored Baseline

Ex A > Ctl A

Ex B > Ctl B >}

Selective

attention

A B C

A B C

A B C

Factorial Designs

Ex A Ex B

AxB

Mixed, Nested Designs

Conjunction Designs

Priming/Adaptation Designs

Page 20: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

The subtraction method

• Acquire data under two

conditions

– These conditions

putatively differ only in

the cognitive process of

interest

• Compare brain images

acquired during those

conditions

• Regions of difference

reflect activation due to the

“subtracted” process of

interest

Petersen et al., 1988

Page 21: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Hierarchical subtraction example from Petersen, 1991

• Rest Control

• Auditory words vs. rest: A1, word recognition centers

• Visual words vs rest: visual areas, word form areas

• Reading or repeating words vs passive words: motor areas

• Generating words vs. repeating: semantic (language) areas

- }

- }

- } Semantic

Motor

Sensory

Page 22: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Experimental design models • Hierarchical designs

– Eg: Peterson et al language study

– Sensory control (see words)

– Output control (read words aloud)

– Language task (generate associates)

• Use a cognitive subtraction model

– Equate demands on all factors except one

• Rely on theory of additive factors

– active areas remain the same throughout the hierarchy

Page 23: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

– One level of hierarchy

– Test for violation of additivity assumption

– Allows you to see common areas active for A

and B

– Assumes A and B have similar psychometric

properties (ie, level of difficulty, variation, and

distribution in the population)

– Need additional approach to see unique areas

Ex B Ex A

Control

Common Baseline

Page 24: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

HOUSE

Page 25: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Directed Attention Models

• All stimuli identical in all conditions

• Direct attention towards different features

• Implicit or explicit

• Assumes process is modified by directed attention

• Assumes passive processing does not capture your variable of interest

Page 26: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Example: implicit selective

attention with parallel comparisons

• Subjects hear pairs of sentences.

• Task: judge if the sentences mean the same thing

• Implicit Manipulation: sentences differ on semantic or syntactic basis

– “The boy went to the store- The boy went to the market”

– “The city is east of the lake. East of the city is the lake”

• Comparisons:

– Common baseline: each vs. rest

– Parallel comparisons: semantic vs syntax and reverse

Page 27: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

EG Corbetta et al

Page 28: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional
Page 29: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional
Page 30: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional
Page 31: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional
Page 32: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Selective attention to shape, color,

motion

Page 33: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Implicit Directed attenion

• EG Dapretto et al

• Instructions are the same; process required to

reach a response differs

• Syntax vs semantics: sentence comprehension

task.

– Do the sentences mean the same thing (Y N)

– The boy has gone to the market. The boy has gone to

the store

– The city is east of the lake. East of the lake is the city.

Page 34: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Dapretto and Bookheimer, Neuron, 1999

Page 35: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Parametric designs

• Employs continuous variation in a stimulus/task parameter

– E.g., working memory load, stimulus contrast

• Inference:

– Modulation of activity reflects sensitivity to the modulated parameter

Page 36: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Boynton et al., 1996

Page 37: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Cohen et al., 1996

Page 38: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Priming/adaptation designs

• Presentation of an item multiple times leads to changes in

activity

– Usually decreased activity upon repetition

• Inference:

– Regions showing decreased activity are sensitive to (i.e. represent)

whatever stimulus features were repeated

• Requires version of pure modulation assumption

– Assumes that processing of specific features is reduced but that the

task is otherwise qualitatively the same

Page 39: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Can adaptation fMRI characterize

neural representations?

• A voxel containing neurons that respond to all

politicians, irrespective of party

• A voxel containing some specifically

Democratic neurons, and other specifically

Republican neurons.

Two stimuli: can neurons tell the

difference?

From R. Raizada

Page 40: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Neural adaptation to repeated stimuli does show the difference:

What counts as repetition for neurons in a voxel?

It’s a politician Same neurons, adapting:

It’s a politician again

It’s a

Republican

Different, fresh neurons:

It’s a Democrat From R. Raizada

Page 41: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Timing

Page 42: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Blocked vs. Event-Related fMRI

BLOCKED:

SPACED MIXED TRIAL:

RAPID MIXED TRIAL:

From R. Buckner, HBM2001

Page 43: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Experimental Paradigm

Block Length = 32.5 sec Total Scan Time = 4:53 min

“Match” “Label” Control

Page 44: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Susan Y. Bookheimer,

Ph.D.

Match

Affect

Hariri et al., 1999 From Hariri et al 1999

Label Affect

Page 45: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Event-Related Designs

• Event-related or single trial experiments

– Have stimuli presented 1 at a time rather than in

blocks

– Adjust for the hemodynamic response function

– Bin like stimuli, obtain averaged HRF

– Compare HRFs across stimulus types

– Long ISI studies (15 seconds) allow for complete

relaxation of HRF (implicit resting control)

– Short ISI studies model additive response of like

stimuli and adjust

Page 46: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Directed vs. averted gaze

Page 47: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Event-Related fMRI Design

Optimized Random Sequence

(Wager & Nichols 2003)

ISI = 500-1500 ms

Jitter = 0-500 ms

2 s

2 s

2 s

+

+

+

TR = 3 s

TR = 3 s

Page 48: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Episodic Retrieval:

R-K Distinction (Eldridge,

Knowlton et al 2000)

• Remember (R) - recognition with conscious

recollection

– Episodic memory

• Know (K) - recognition without recollection

– Non-episodic memory

Page 49: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Left Hippocampus Anatomic ROI

Page 50: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Two-Group Designs

• Two-group designs

– Hypothesis: groups differ in activation vs

control comparisons

– Different from resting state differences ala

FDG

– Performance confounds

Page 51: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

% c

orr

ect

Match Label Control0

20

40

60

80

100

High-Functioning

Autistic Boys

Normal Adults

Accuracy

Page 52: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Directed vs. averted gaze

Page 53: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

TD: Directed vs Averted Gaze

(negative emotions)

Amygdala,

hippocampus,

Medial PFC,

lateral PFC

Visual and HC

Page 54: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

ASD

Visual and HC No task

modulation

Page 55: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Between-group direct

comparisons

Direct

TD > ASD

Averted

TD > ASD

Page 56: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Functional Connectivity in fMRI

Page 57: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Functional Connectivity

Page 58: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Imaging Genetics

• Growing Field

• Examines differences in brain structure/function/connectivity as a result of possessing different genetic polymorphisms

• Usually chosen for conferring risk for a disorder

• Imaging differences seen in normal populations with different, common polymorphisms in the absence of obvious behavioral or phenotypic differences

Page 59: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

fMRI in normal subjects with

genetic risk for AD Bookheimer, Small, et al, NEJM 2000

• Purpose: use fMRI to identify changes in brain function

prior to significant cognitive decline; predict outcome

• APOE-3 vs E-4 extremely healthy older volunteers

(X=63.5; N=30)

• Memory “stress-test” in cognitively normal elderly

– Memorize unrelated word pairs “justice-club”

– Scans compare learning/retrieval vs. control

Page 60: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Group Analysis: Effect of Genotype

Page 61: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

5HTT and imaging

Page 62: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Amygdala response:

5HTT short allele > Long allele

Cohort 1 Cohort 2

Page 63: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Applications

• Mapping normal functions: within group

• Clinical applications: between group designs

– Surgical planning

– AD/AD risk

– Drug interventions

– Psychiatric disorders

Page 64: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Clinical Applications:

Neurosurgical planning

• Goal: Identify critical areas

• Task specificity issues

• Disruption by the lesion

• Language performance

Page 65: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Recording

Strips

Stimulation

Points- 1 cm

Page 66: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Language Tasks • Object Naming

– Finding a name; expression

– Used in OR; alternate forms; reveals Broca’s area and

Basal temporal language area

• Auditory Naming

Smell with this “nose”

Color of grass “green”

– Finding a name; comprehension, expression

Page 67: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Conjunction Analysis

• Within task, repeat conditions (3 times)

• Across tasks, find areas of overlap

• Perform separately for receptive, expressive

tasks

• Allows low magnitude activations that are

consistent to show.

Page 68: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional
Page 69: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Areas of conjunction

Page 70: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional
Page 71: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Pharmaco- fMRI

• Use fMRI to identify brain changes

associated with treatment

• Eg, Acetylcholine agonist treatment may

improve memory in AD

• fMRI Pre- and post-treatment with Aricept

Page 72: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Pre-Treatment

Post-Treatment

Donepezil Treatment- Mild AD

Related Paired-Associate Learning vs. Rest

Page 73: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

fMRI in Psychiatric populations

• Panic disorder

• Social anxiety

• ADHD

• Autism

• Bipolar

Page 74: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Panic Disorder- symptom provocation

Page 75: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Social Anxiety and amygdala

arousal Guyer et al, Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2008 65(11): 1303–1312.

Simulated online “chat” in social anxiety and control adolescents

Page 76: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Amygdala

hyperarousal in

social anxiety

disordered

children

Page 77: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Susan Y. Bookheimer, Ph.D.

Disgust and Threat Responses in

OCD (Shapira et al, Biol Psychiatry. 2003)

Threat

Disgust

Control OCD

Page 78: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Susan Y. Bookheimer, Ph.D.

Bipolar Disorder- Mania Altshuler et al 2005

Page 79: Functional MRI: techniques and applicationsFunctional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (FMRI) • MRI scanning of brain function (vs. structure) • An indirect measure of increased regional

Summary

• Numerous applications for fMRI in

translational research

• Elucidate normal brain systems

• Help identify circuits impaired in patient

populations

• Numerous new techniques