Applied to neuroscience, fMRI helps doctors “read the mind” by studying how neural networks develop and allow humans to speak, see, hear, move and perform all the other complex operations of the human body. In the future, fMRI can more accurately help doctors learn how humans think and make decisions, aside from allowing them to understand and learn more about how brain abnormalities develop, how stroke victims recover their brain and motor functions, and how severe nervous disease disorders such as schizophrenia, Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s develop and affect people.
[4] Such research and new knowledge would be helpful not only in discovering lasting cures but, perhaps more important to assure an over-all improvement in public health, in prevention in the first place. This has far-reaching implications not only in health care costs and government and insurance policies, but also in determining more effective strategies for medical intervention. 2. fMRI Data and Analysis Advances in computer software that allow doctors to capture MRI signals have helped realise advances in the usefulness of fMRI in the field of neuroscience.
With the use of the proper imaging sequence, doctors are able to study and observe the functions of the various regions in the cortex: visual, motor, and Broca’s area of speech and language-related activities. [5] There are several advantages derived from fMRI in producing brain activity images related to a specific task or sensory process. For one, the signal does not use radioactive isotopes and is therefore safer for the patient and the doctors. Besides, fMRI is faster. The procedure takes only a short time, e.g., 1.
5 to 2 minutes each depending on the scanning paradigm. Likewise, fMRI produces high in-pane resolution of the functional image: a 1.5 by 1.5 mm resolution is standard but more enhanced images could be captured by more advanced machines, making fMRI optimally suitable for analysis and making more accurate plans for neurosurgical or treatment interventions. [6] 3. Data Acquisition and Processing The technology of fMRI uses variations in MRI signals from functional brain activity. The most widely used method depends on Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent or BOLD signal changes due to blood flow and metabolic characteristics of neuronal responses.
[7] In the brain, specific functions are localised at various sites, allowing fMRI to identify and map functional specialisation at high spatial resolutions. Neuroscience has allowed the matching of specific areas in the brain with their corresponding mental behaviour through BOLD-fMRI methods. Whilst imaging methods and procedures depend on the machine used and can be different from one another, this paper looks at the method applied using a 1.5T General Electric Magnetic Resonance Imaging System.
The author is indebted for this section of the paper on the Columbia University MRI website that contains a detailed description of its fMRI system. [8] Columbia University’s General Electric system has an echo planar option that results in rapid acquisition of images at slice thicknesses set at 3-5 mm. Simultaneous images can be captured on as many as 16 contiguous slices oriented along any suitable plane. Getting 21 slices is possible but this would take longer. Each imaging series requires approximately 30 complete head volume acquisitions.
[8] Processing the image requires a stand-alone facility separate from the image acquisition or scanner system. This facility is where the computations required are made to reconstruct the large numbers of images and to provide the statistical analyses that allows neuroscientists to determine which anatomical regions are active during specific tasks. [8] How is a patient scanned using fMRI whilst performing a simple task, such as tapping a finger or shaking a foot? As in a conventional scan, the patient is positioned in the scanner and plane lines are set based on conventional scanning methods.
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