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fMRI Methods Lecture8 – Electrophysiology & fMRI
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Neurovascular coupling Iadecola et. al. 2007
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Neural activity “Input” versus “output” of a neuron Ions moving across the membrane
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Energy consumption Brain activity consumes 20% of the body’s energy at rest. Glucose + oxygen => ATP Vasculature replenishes metabolites. Laughlin et. al. Science 2003 Anesthesia reduces brain energy consumption by ~50%.
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Energy consumption The power required for neural “Signaling” is a sum of both neural output (spikes) and input: Lennie P. Curr Bio 2003 Input Output
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Neural activity costs Input is more expensive than output. Neurons spend more energy on “listening” than “talking” Dogma: Neural output (firing rate) is the interesting part.
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Hemodynamic changes Neural input or output? Combination of both?
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Electrophysiology Different techniques: 1.Intra-cellular recordings 2.Extra-cellular recordings 3.Fluorescence imaging Different spatial resolutions: 1.Single neuron activity 2.Multi unit activity 3.Local field potential
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Extra-cellular recordings Separate the recorded signal into different components. High frequencies (>500 Hz): Low frequencies (<100 Hz):
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Simultaneous measurements Measure simultaneous electrophysiology and fMRI and compare. Logothetis et. al. Nature 2001
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Simultaneous measurements Before separating electrophysiology into different components
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Simultaneous measurements LFP and BOLD responses are sustained while MUA seems to adapt very quickly. Anything strange?
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BOLD – spiking dissociations Several other studies have reported such dissociations… Viswanathan et. al. Nat. Neurosci. 2007
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BOLD – spiking dissociations Several other studies have reported such dissociations… Viswanathan et. al. Nat. Neurosci. 2007
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Spatial Sampling MUA is a local measure, summing neural spikes only of neurons surrounding the immediate electrode tip. LFP and BOLD are wider measures, summing dendritic/synaptic activity several mm surrounding the electrode.
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Sampling bias Multi unit activity is mainly generated by large layer 5 pyramidal cells. These are the main “output” neurons of the cortex. LFP and BOLD sum across all cell sizes in all layers.
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Cortical structure In cortex, 80% of a neurons output synapses are located within 1 mm of its soma. Strong recurrent innervation. Only 6% of V1 synapses (mostly layer 4) are from thalamic neurons. Input without output? Increased LFP without spiking?
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BOLD, LFP, and spikes Epilepsy patients implanted with electrodes in auditory cortex: Mukamel et. al. Science 2005
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BOLD, LFP, and spikes Neural activity correlated with fMRI:
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BOLD, LFP, and spikes Different LFP frequencies showed different relationship to BOLD:
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Optogenetics Hyung Lee et. al. Nature 2010
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Optogenetics Inject virus into motor cortex. Axons of infected cells reach thalamus. Stimulate in motor cortex and measure activity in both locations.
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During rest What about spontaneous activity? Shmuel et. al. HBM 2008
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During rest Significant correlations between neural activity and BOLD during rest…
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Negative BOLD? Shmuel et. al. Nat. Neurosci. 2006
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Negative BOLD?
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Cerebellum Subcortical brain areas might demand more caution. Architecture is different: no recurrent innervation. There is a difference between input and output. BOLD coupled to input. Caeser et. al. PNAS 2003 GABA agonist halts PC spikes BOLD continues
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One more thought The effects of neuro-modulators (caffeine, hormones, noradrenalin, dopamine, serotonin, etc…) on particulars of neural activity and neurovascular coupling are unknown.
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To the lab
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