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Blood-oxygen-level-dependent imaging

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103:. This leads to magnetic signal variation which can be detected using an MRI scanner. Given many repetitions of a thought, action or experience, statistical methods can be used to determine the areas of the brain which reliably have more of this difference as a result, and therefore which areas of the brain are most active during that thought, action or experience. 149:
have been measured by a gradient echo pulse sequence. Experiments shown that when the content of oxygen in the breathing gas changed gradually, the contrast of these images changed gradually. Ogawa proposed and proved that the oxyhemoglobin and deoxyhemoglobin is the major contribution of this difference.
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change of blood oxygenation could be detected with MRI. In Ogawa's experiments, blood-oxygen-level-dependent imaging of rodent brain slice contrast in different components of the air. At high magnetic fields, water proton magnetic resonance images of brains of live mice and rats under anesthetization
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The typical discarding of the low-frequency signals in BOLD-contrast imaging came into question in 1995, when it was observed that the "noise" in the area of the brain that controls right-hand movement fluctuated in unison with similar activity in the area on the opposite side of the brain associated
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Although most fMRI research uses BOLD contrast imaging as a method to determine which parts of the brain are most active, because the signals are relative, and not individually quantitative, some question its rigor. Other methods which propose to measure neural activity directly have been attempted
112:(for example, measurement of the Oxygen Extraction Fraction, or OEF, in regions of the brain, which measures how much of the oxyhemoglobin in the blood has been converted to deoxyhemoglobin), but because the electromagnetic fields created by an active or firing neuron are so weak, the 227:
The fMRI signal is usually referred to as the blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) signal because the imaging method relies on changes in the level of oxygen in the human brain induced by alterations in blood
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with left-hand movement. BOLD-contrast imaging is only sensitive to differences between two brain states, so a new method was needed to analyse these correlated fluctuations called
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and colleagues showed that hemoglobin has different magnetic properties in its oxygenated and deoxygenated forms (deoxygenated hemoglobin is
38: 423: 68:, blood releases oxygen to active neurons at a greater rate than to inactive neurons. This causes a change of the relative levels of 367:
OGAWA, SEIJI (1990). "Oxygenation-sensitive contrast in magnetic resonance image of rodent brain at high magnetic fields".
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Ogawa et al. were able to demonstrate that in vivo changes blood oxygenation could be detected with MRI.
113: 65: 64:, so their firing causes a need for more energy to be brought in quickly. Through a process called the 318: 202: 17: 392: 241: 125: 263:
Theory of NMR signal behavior in magnetically inho...[Magn Reson Med. 1994] - PubMed Result
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methods used to extract quantitative data have been largely unsuccessful so far.
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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
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and colleagues, who first used the technique in human participants in 1992.
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and Colleagues in 1990, following an experiment which demonstrated that an
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of blood-oxygen-level-dependent contrast imaging was provided by
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or other organs, which are found to be active at any given time.
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Roche, Richard A.P.; Commins, Seán; Dockree, Paul M. (2009).
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do not have internal reserves of energy in the form of
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E. Raichle, Marcus (2010). "The Brain's Dark Energy".
276:"Detection of deception with fMRI: Are we there yet?" 414:. In Roche, Richard A.P.; Commins, Seán (eds.). 8: 416:Pioneering studies in cognitive neuroscience 152:Other notable pioneers of BOLD fMRI include 188: 186: 340: 330: 99:), both of which could be detected using 41:(fMRI) to observe different areas of the 274:Langleben, Daniel D. (1 February 2008). 182: 166:Amplitude of low frequency fluctuations 242:"Milestone 19: (1990) Functional MRI" 39:functional magnetic resonance imaging 7: 31:Blood-oxygen-level-dependent imaging 18:Blood-oxygen-level dependent imaging 280:Legal and Criminological Psychology 87:In 1990, three papers published by 25: 215:10.1038/scientificamerican0310-44 305:Raichle, ME (3 February 1998). 369:Magnetic Resonance in Medicine 1: 95:and oxygenated hemoglobin is 76:(oxygenated or deoxygenated 462: 107:Criticism and limitations 292:10.1348/135532507X251641 82:magnetic susceptibility 381:10.1002/mrm.1910140108 37:, is a method used in 332:10.1073/pnas.95.3.765 116:is extremely low and 114:signal-to-noise ratio 66:haemodynamic response 35:BOLD-contrast imaging 323:1998PNAS...95..765R 207:2010SciAm.302c..44R 195:Scientific American 126:resting state fMRI 27:Type of MR imaging 16:(Redirected from 453: 430: 429: 407: 401: 400: 364: 358: 357: 344: 334: 302: 296: 295: 271: 265: 260: 254: 253: 251: 249: 237: 231: 230: 190: 138:proof of concept 21: 461: 460: 456: 455: 454: 452: 451: 450: 436: 435: 434: 433: 426: 409: 408: 404: 366: 365: 361: 304: 303: 299: 273: 272: 268: 261: 257: 247: 245: 239: 238: 234: 192: 191: 184: 179: 162: 134: 109: 74:deoxyhemoglobin 51: 28: 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 459: 457: 449: 448: 438: 437: 432: 431: 425:978-0335233564 424: 402: 359: 297: 266: 255: 232: 181: 180: 178: 175: 174: 173: 168: 161: 158: 133: 130: 108: 105: 50: 47: 26: 24: 14: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 458: 447: 444: 443: 441: 427: 421: 417: 413: 406: 403: 398: 394: 390: 386: 382: 378: 374: 370: 363: 360: 356: 352: 348: 343: 338: 333: 328: 324: 320: 317:(3): 765–72. 316: 312: 308: 301: 298: 293: 289: 285: 281: 277: 270: 267: 264: 259: 256: 243: 240:Chou, I-han. 236: 233: 229: 224: 220: 216: 212: 208: 204: 200: 196: 189: 187: 183: 176: 172: 171:MRI sequences 169: 167: 164: 163: 159: 157: 155: 154:Kenneth Kwong 150: 147: 143: 139: 131: 129: 127: 121: 119: 115: 106: 104: 102: 98: 94: 90: 85: 83: 79: 75: 71: 70:oxyhemoglobin 67: 63: 59: 55: 48: 46: 44: 40: 36: 32: 19: 446:Neuroimaging 415: 405: 375:(1): 68–78. 372: 368: 362: 354: 314: 310: 300: 283: 279: 269: 258: 246:. Retrieved 235: 226: 201:(3): 44–49. 198: 194: 151: 145: 135: 122: 110: 93:paramagnetic 86: 52: 34: 30: 29: 142:Seiji Ogawa 118:statistical 97:diamagnetic 89:Seiji Ogawa 286:(1): 1–9. 177:References 440:Category 397:12379024 248:9 August 244:. Nature 223:20184182 160:See also 389:2161986 351:9448239 319:Bibcode 203:Bibcode 146:in vivo 132:History 54:Neurons 422:  395:  387:  349:  339:  221:  62:oxygen 49:Theory 393:S2CID 342:33796 228:flow. 78:blood 58:sugar 43:brain 33:, or 420:ISBN 385:PMID 347:PMID 250:2013 219:PMID 136:Its 72:and 60:and 377:doi 337:PMC 327:doi 288:doi 211:doi 199:302 101:MRI 442:: 391:. 383:. 373:14 371:. 353:. 345:. 335:. 325:. 315:95 313:. 309:. 284:13 282:. 278:. 225:. 217:. 209:. 197:. 185:^ 128:. 84:. 428:. 399:. 379:: 329:: 321:: 294:. 290:: 252:. 213:: 205:: 20:)

Index

Blood-oxygen-level dependent imaging
functional magnetic resonance imaging
brain
Neurons
sugar
oxygen
haemodynamic response
oxyhemoglobin
deoxyhemoglobin
blood
magnetic susceptibility
Seiji Ogawa
paramagnetic
diamagnetic
MRI
signal-to-noise ratio
statistical
resting state fMRI
proof of concept
Seiji Ogawa
Kenneth Kwong
Amplitude of low frequency fluctuations
MRI sequences


Bibcode
2010SciAm.302c..44R
doi
10.1038/scientificamerican0310-44
PMID

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