Functional Neuroimaging Flashcards

1
Q

Imaging of functional activity can be done ______ or ______.

A

direct or indirectly

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2
Q

What does the indirect imaging measurements quantify?

A

cerebral blood flow, blood oxygen levels, or oxygen or glucose consumption

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3
Q

Is electric and magnetic signals direct or indirect?

A

direct measurement of neural activity

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4
Q

Electroencephalography (EEG)

A

electrical potential produced by large populations of neurons are measured by electrodes placed on the scalp

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5
Q

EEG provides continuous recording of what?

A

recordings of overall brain activity

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6
Q

What are the recorded measured signals of an EEG referred to as?

A

Electroencephalogram

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7
Q

Predictable EEG patterns are associated with different behavioral states; Why would you compare EEG readings to neurotypical patterns?

A

in order to detect abnormalities

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8
Q

What is the quality of EEGs?

A

Good temporal quality, poor spatial quality

- Signal can be distorted as it passes through the tissue

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9
Q

Magnetoencephalography (MEG) measures….

A

neural activity by capturing the magnetic fields produced by active neurons

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10
Q

What is the quality of MEGs?

A

similar temporal quality as EEG, but better spatial resolution due to lack of signal distortion

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11
Q

How are MEGs applied?

A

during neurosurgery

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12
Q

Why are MEGs useful?

A

for identifying cortical functionality

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13
Q

Is measuring metabolic signals direct or indirect?

A

indirect measurement of neural activity

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14
Q

Positron Emission Tomography (PET) measures….

A

local changes in cerebral blood flow

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15
Q

Areas of increased blood flow on a PET scan = what?

A

increased neural activity

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16
Q

What is required for PET scans?

A

Radioactive tracer injected into the bloodstream (tracer emits photons/gamma rays)

17
Q

How does a PET scanner detect blood flow?

A

detects the location of emitted gamma rays

18
Q

When are PET scans employed?

A
  • 1st during a control condition (subject at rest)

- 2nd during experimental condition (subject engaged in a cognitive task)

19
Q

What will brain areas of heightened neural activity emit?

A

will emit the highest levels of gamma rays due to increased blood flow in those regions

20
Q

What are results of PET scans reported as?

A

as a change in regional cerebral blood flow (rBCF) between two conditions

21
Q

What are the downsides of PET studies?

A

requires injection of radioactive isoptope

  • Invasive procedure
  • Limited number of tests due to exposure
22
Q

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) relies on what?

A

relies on the magnetic properties of hemoglobin

23
Q

fMRI measures

A

the ratio of oxygenated to deoxygenated hemoglobin in the bloodstream

24
Q

What is the ratio of oxy vs. deoxy hemoglobin referred to as?

A

blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) effect

25
Q

As a brain region becomes more active (during fMRI) what happens to the BOLD effect ratio?

A

Cerebral blood flow to those areas increases thus the ratio of oxygenated to deoxygenated hemoglobin in that region increases

26
Q

Why is fMRI a preferred neuroimaging technique?

A
  • Non-invasive and can be repeated
  • Found in most hospitals and require less staff to run
  • Spatial resolution is better than PET
  • Improve temporal resolution is possible with fMRI due to the rapid measurement of the BOLD signal
27
Q

Previous view of evolving brain theory?

A
  • Neural circuitry is static
  • Cognitive function and memory are localize
  • Information processing involves only serial processing
  • Brain function(s) vulnerable to single site injury
  • Clinical supporting evidence limited
28
Q

Current view of evolving brain theory?

A
  • Neural circuitry is plastic
  • Cognitive functions and memory are distributed
  • Information processing involves serial, parallel, and reciprocal
  • Brain activity is driven by internal, intrinsic cycles of network activity (intrinsic and extrinsic interaction)
  • Brain function(s) resistant to degradation by single site injury
  • Clinical supporting evidence strong
29
Q

Cognitive network neuroscience is a branch of neuroscience that studies what?

A

how brain dynamics within the human brain networks support cognitive function

30
Q

What are single-source divergent networks?

A

functional neural pathways comprised of neurons within specific nuclei found that release one type of signaling molecule that influence numerous other target brain areas

31
Q

Cognitive network characteristics

A
  • Appear early during embryonic development
  • Support all cognitive functions of the brain
  • Constantly modulate neural activity and are referred to as “brain state modulatory controls”
  • Organized in a hierarchy (local division of labor within the network)
  • Exhibit functional stability in the face of local network damage
  • Are created and altered by synaptic plasticity processes
  • Consist of many long-reaching axonal branches
  • Categorized by the neurotransmitter utilized