Title of article
Task-specific deactivation patterns in functional magnetic resonance imaging
Author/Authors
Hutchinson، نويسنده , , M and Schiffer، نويسنده , , W and Joseffer، نويسنده , , S and Liu، نويسنده , , A and Schlosser، نويسنده , , R and Dikshit، نويسنده , , S and Goldberg، نويسنده , , E and Brodie، نويسنده , , J.D، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
10
From page
1427
To page
1436
Abstract
In general, image analysis of cognitive experiments using functional magnetic resonance imaging techniques has emphasized those regions of the brain where increases in signal intensity, with regard to the reference state, are associated with activation. Nevertheless, a number of recent papers have shown that there are areas of deactivation as well. In this study, we have used a univariate analysis and echo-planar functional magnetic resonance imaging to address the relationship of the reference state to the deactivations. We employed two dichotomous covert tasks, orthographic lexical retrieval and pure visual retrieval, to contrast with the reference state (baseline) of silent counting. Our analysis yielded extensive, task-specific landscapes of regional incremental and decremental responses. We have specifically demonstrated that the decremental responses are not due to activation in the reference state. We have also demonstrated that they are not an artifact of a specific part of the image analysis, and propose that they represent a physiological, task specific signal that should be considered an integral component of neural networks representing brain function.
Keywords
Functional MRI , deactivation , Retrieval , Silent counting , BASELINE
Journal title
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Record number
1830411
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