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Visualize: Functional MRI
July/August 2001
http://www.techreview.com/magazine/jul01/visualize.asp

A magnet and radio signals detect brain activity.
Click image to see animation.

A functional magnetic resonance image shows where brain activity
occurs during some kinds of perception. (Adapted from Zacks
et al., Nature Neuroscience 4(5), June 2001)

Medical imaging has come a long way since 1895, when german
physicist Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen observed strange flickers
cast by his cathode-ray instruments. Within months, Röntgen
had used the mysterious "x-rays," as he called them, to produce
an image of the bones of his wife's hand, revolutionizing medicine.

For the first time, physicians could peek inside the body without
cutting it open or probing an orifice.

Today they can practically image our thoughts.

One of the latest technologies for seeing under our skin—
functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)—uses the
combination of a powerful magnet and radio frequency
pulses to see which parts of the brain are active. Neurons
themselves are too small to image, but their activity causes
changes in the flow of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
around them. For example, when you hear a loud noise,
a patch of neurons fires on each side of your brain.
Their activity requires an increase in blood supply.
The oxygen-rich inrushing blood has different magnetic
properties than the deoxygenated blood that it displaces.
The magnet and the radio signals inside the functional MRI
scanner work together to reveal where blood is rich in oxygen
and where it is not. The resulting image shows the two patches
of neural activity as bright regions on either side of the brain.
From such maps, researchers can determine which parts of the
brain are used for speech, vision, auditory and motor skills,
and more.

Functional magnetic resonance imaging was first realized
in 1990 when Seiji Ogawa, working at what was then AT&T's
Bell Laboratories, announced that he could use the contrasts
in blood oxygen levels to create images of regional brain activity.
The technique is a step up from diagnostic magnetic resonance,
which has been around since the 1970s and produces detailed
views of bones, ligaments and other tissue. Another method,
called positron emission tomography, does provide images
similar to a functional MRI's—but it requires patients to be
injected with radioactive substances.

As fMRI improves, so too will medicine. Recently, researchers
at the Medical College of Wisconsin in Milwaukee used the
technology to figure out which part of the brain manages
our perception of time. Their find could lead to new drugs
for patients with Parkinson's disease, who often experience
problems with time perception.

http://www.techreview.com/magazine/jul01/visualize.asp

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