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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging [PDF]
In multiple sclerosis (MS), the clinical manifestations and the patterns of disease evolution are highly variable and correlate only weakly with findings on conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans of the brain [1–3]. During the last few years, significant effort has been devoted to the definition of the factors contributing to this clinical/
FILIPPI , MASSIMO, Rocca MA
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Neurology, 2005Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging edited by Scott A. Huettel, Allen W. Song, and Gregory McCarthy, 492 pp., Sunderland, MA, Sinauer Associates, 2004, $79.95 Not long ago, if one planned to teach a course on MRI, it was necessary to come up with original lecture notes and assign primary readings because MRI was such a novel (and peculiar) mix of ...
Jianhui Zhong, Daphne Bavelier
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging
2016Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) maps the spatiotemporal distribution of neural activity in the brain under varying cognitive conditions. Since its inception in 1991, blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) fMRI has rapidly become a vital methodology in basic and applied neuroscience research. In the clinical realm, it has become an established
Ryan Fisicaro +2 more
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain
Annals of Internal Medicine, 1995This conference reviewed the potential scope of application of recently developed techniques for functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) of the brain. The most successful technique is based on the sensitivity of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to magnetic effects caused by the modulation of the oxygenation state of hemoglobin, which is induced by
D. LEBIHAN +5 more
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Neurosurgery Clinics of North America, 1997This article discusses the use of functional magnetic resonance (fMR) imaging to localize language. Suggestions are made for ensuring visualization of language areas by selection of effective activation tasks. It is argued that the superior temporal gyrus responses evoked by listening to speech represent auditory, rather than language, processing.
Leblanc R, Zatorre R
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging
International Review of Psychiatry, 2001AbstractFunctional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a relatively new technique for measuring changes in cerebral blood flow. The first fMRI studies, showing functional activation of the occipital cortex by visual stimulation and activation of the motor cortex by finger movement, were published in the early 1990s.
John Suckling, Edward T. Bullmore
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging
BMJ, 2011The 2003 Nobel Prize in Medicine went to Paul Lauterbur and Sir Peter Mansfield for the invention of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the 1970s. Since its invention MRI has rapidly changed the world of medicine; there are currently more than 20,000 MRI scanners in the world and many millions of images are generated by them each year.
Thomas T. Liu, Joanna E Perthen
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
2014Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is the most frequently used functional neuroimaging method and the one that accounts for most of the neuroimaging literature. It measures the blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal in different parts of the brain during rest and during task-induced activation of functional networks mediating basic and ...
Andrew C. Papanicolaou +2 more
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Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
2019Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) maps brain activity by detecting changes in image intensity related to neural activity by the blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) contrast. Functional MRI data essentially consists of time series of 3D images associated with a description of the experimental conditions.
Karsten Tabelow, Jörg Polzehl
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Functional magnetic resonance imaging
2012Introduction Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allows the non-invasive measurement of neural activity nearly everywhere in the brain. The structural predecessor, MRI, was invented in the early 1970s (Lauterbur, 1973) and has been used clinically since the mid-1980s to provide high-resolution structural images of body parts, including rapid
Bartels, A., Goense, J., Logothetis, N.
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