STRUCTURAL IMAGING
Structural imaging measures of the spatial configuration of different types of tissues in the brain (CT/MRI)
Functional imaging measures temporary changes in brain physiology associated with cognitive processing; the most common method is fMRI and is based on a hemodynamic measure
COMPUTERIZED TOMOGRAPHY
Computerized tomography (CT) scans are constructed according to the amount of X-ray absorption is related to tissue density: bone absorbs the most (so the skull appears white), cerebrospinal fluid absorbs the least (so the ventricles appear black) and the brain matter is intermediate (appears gray)
MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has number of advantages over CT scanning:
- It does not use ionizing radiation and so is completely safe
- It provides a much better spatial resolution, which allows the folds of individual gyri to discerned
- It provides better discrimination between white and gray matter
- It can be adapted for use in detecting the changes in blood 02 associated with neural activity, called fMRI.
- A strong magnetic field is applied across the part of the body being scanned
- The single protons that are found in water molecules in the body have weak magnetic fields. Initially, these fields will be oriented randomly, but when the strong external field is applied a small fraction of them will align themselves with this.
- When the protons are in the aligned state a brief radio frequency pulse is applied that knocks the orientations of the aligned protons by 90 degrees to their original orientation.
- As the protons spins (or precess) in this new state, they produce a detectable charge in the magnetic field and this is what forms the basis of the MR signal.
- The protons will eventually be pulled back into their original alignment with the magnetic field (they "relax")
- The scanner repeats this process serially by sending the radio wave to excite different slices of the brain in turn.
Functional imaging is designed to measure the moment-to-moment variable characteristics of the brain that may be associated with changes in cognitive processing.
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is different from VBM in that it measures the white matter connectivity. It is able to do this because water molecules trapped in axons tend to diffuse in some directions but not others. Specifically a water molecule is free to travel down the length of the axon but is prevented from traveling out of the axon by the fetty membrane. When many such axons are arranged together it is possible to quantify this effect with MRI (using a measure called fractional anisotropy)
BOLD: Blood O2-level-dependent contrast; the signal measured in fMRI that relates to the concentration of deoxyhemoglobin in the blood
- Initial dip. As neurons consume oxygen there is small rise in the amount of deoxyhemoglobin, which results in a reduction of the BOLD signal.
- Overcompensation. In response to the increased consumption of oxygen, the blood flow to the region increases, The increase in blood flow is greater than the increased consumption, which means that the BOLD signal increases significantly.
- Undershoot. Finally the blood flow and oxygen consumptions dip before returning to their original level. This may reflect a relaxation of the venous system, causing a temporary increase in deoxyhemoglobin again.