DocumentCode
3037545
Title
Human brain mapping of judgment system of movement of visualized material fMRI study
Author
Shimada, Takamasa ; Liqurf, W. ; Fukami, Tadashi ; Saito, Yuya
Author_Institution
Sch. of Inf. Environ., Tokyo Denki Univ., Chiba, Japan
fYear
2003
fDate
20-22 Oct. 2003
Firstpage
156
Lastpage
157
Abstract
Visual system of creature has been frequently studied. In conventional study, anatomical and physiological investigations using macaque monkey indicate functional streams within the extrastriate visual cortex and participation of V5 area in motion perception was revealed. On the other hand, the region used for motion judgment was not cleared. Moreover, the overall information flow from visual cortex to visual judgment is not cleared. In this paper, we focused on specifying a cortex for motion judgment and information flow in brain. For analysis, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The short videos of moving ball (lasting 1 s) and stationary ball (lasting 1 s) were randomly presented to subjects repeatedly. Each paradigm consisted of two main conditions (control and activation condition). During control, subjects continued tapping regardless of stimuli. During activation condition, subjects tap only when the video of moving ball was presented (motion judgment). In our research, the activation in frontal cortex (Brodmann 9) was detected during judgment task.
Keywords
biomedical MRI; brain; neurophysiology; visual perception; brain; extrastriate visual cortex; fMRI; frontal cortex activation; functional magnetic resonance imaging; human brain mapping; information flow; judgment system; motion perception; moving ball video; stationary ball video; visualized material movement; Brain mapping; Electroencephalography; Humans; Image analysis; Magnetic analysis; Magnetic resonance; Magnetic resonance imaging; Superconducting materials; Superconductivity; Videos;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Biomedical Engineering, 2003. IEEE EMBS Asian-Pacific Conference on
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7943-8
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/APBME.2003.1302631
Filename
1302631
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