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Inhibitory neural activity produces a significant BOLD response in human cortical areas Archana Purushotham, Seong-Gi Kim Center for Magnetic Resonance.

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Presentation on theme: "Inhibitory neural activity produces a significant BOLD response in human cortical areas Archana Purushotham, Seong-Gi Kim Center for Magnetic Resonance."— Presentation transcript:

1 Inhibitory neural activity produces a significant BOLD response in human cortical areas Archana Purushotham, Seong-Gi Kim Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Depts of Radiology and Biomedical Engineering, University of Minnesota, USA Acknowledgements: Robert Jech, Tommy Vaughan, Gregor Adriany, Peter Andersen

2 Introduction Understanding the neural correlates of BOLD activity: Does it result from excitation alone, or from both excitation and inhibition? Arthurs and Boniface, Trends in Neurosciences 2002

3 Waldvogel et. al., Nature 2000 Task: simple push-button; go/no-go trials Confirmed inhibition in primary motor cortex (M1) by TMS fMRI: no significant change from baseline for M1 during no- go task; present in pre-supplementary motor area. Inhibition is metabolically much less demanding than excitation: does not give rise to an observable BOLD response in M1. Our hypothesis: Being a very simple task, the inhibitory component accompanying no-go trials is very small, insufficient to give rise to a detectable BOLD response in M1

4 Objective To determine the BOLD correlates of inhibitory neural activity in the human motor cortex, using a delayed, pre-cued directed go/no-go task.

5 Paradigm A delayed, cued joystick go/no-go task: Variable, pseudo-randomized delay periods : 0, 2, 4 and 7 sec No-go trials occurred 20% of the time: after 7.3 seconds, centre circle turned black instead of green Trial epochs : 30 or 35 seconds long; 30-40 trials

6 Data Acquisition fMRI Single-shot 64 x 64 EPI images using a 4 Tesla MRI system 9 normal adult, right-handed human subjects 5 axial sections of thickness 5 mm each, including the primary, supplementary (SMA) and pre-motor areas TR = 1sec for most subjects; 0.5 sec for 2 subjects Structural images 128 x 128 T1-weighted (FLASH or segmented EPI) Electromyography Surface EMG of flexors and extensors of forearm, simultaneously for 3 subjects, pre-fMRI training for 1.

7 Data Analysis fMRI epochs grouped by delay period and averaged to get mean timecourse for each delay condition EMG epochs checked for untimely activity, and behavioural data for errors; corresponding epochs excluded Cross-correlation based on the no-delay epoch time-course used to generate maps (3 maps based on different thresholds) Timecourses detrended linearly if drifts were apparent

8 Data Analysis (contd.) Primary and supplementary motor areas demarcated manually using structural images Epoch time-courses created by averaging over activated voxels in each area Compared time-courses for 7-second delay condition (go) versus no-go condition, for each area Used data from subjects with sufficient SNR (judging from comparability of preparation activity for go and no-go tasks)

9 Does a state of preparedness to move exist? Reaction time (msec) Delay period (sec) 0247

10 Surface electromyogram of forearm muscles Time (sec) Go trial No-go trial

11 Activation map based on no-delay movement Central sulcus SMAM1 Regions of interest Contra.

12 SMA (n = 7; CC = 0.7) Time (sec) BOLD % change Prep. Go/ No-go

13 M1 (n = 7; CC = 0.7) Time (sec) BOLD % change Prep. Go/ No-go

14 Consistency of observed result Three statistical thresholds (CC = 0.6, 0.7, 0.8) used for analysis : result independent of threshold Across subjects: 6 out of 7 subjects clear inhibition-related BOLD response in M1 1 subject amplitude change very low; not individually convincing

15 Higher order motor areas (including SMA) Primary motor area Muscular activity Go cueNo-go cue Schematic of neural activity Prep. cue

16 Evoked potential recording: preliminary data P A Contra.Ipsi.

17 Cz (midline) Time w.r.t appearance of go/no-go cue (100 msec) Evoked potential ( V) go no-go

18 C3 (contralateral) Time (100 msec) Evoked potential ( V) go no-go

19 Inhibitory synaptic activity in the primary motor area during non-performance of a prepared task is associated with a significant BOLD signal. The amplitude of the BOLD signal peak due to inhibition is comparable to that due to preparation. Conclusion

20 C4 (ipsilateral) Time (100 msec) Evoked potential ( V)


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