4 research outputs found
Cortical depth dependent functional responses in humans at 7T: improved specificity with 3D GRASE
Ultra high fields (7T and above) allow functional imaging with high contrast-to-noise ratios and improved spatial resolution. This, along with improved hardware and imaging techniques, allow investigating columnar and laminar functional responses. Using gradient-echo (GE) (T2* weighted) based sequences, layer specific responses have been recorded from human (and animal) primary visual areas. However, their increased sensitivity to large surface veins potentially clouds detecting and interpreting layer specific responses. Conversely, spin-echo (SE) (T2 weighted) sequences are less sensitive to large veins and have been used to map cortical columns in humans. T2 weighted 3D GRASE with inner volume selection provides high isotropic resolution over extended volumes, overcoming some of the many technical limitations of conventional 2D SE-EPI, whereby making layer specific investigations feasible. Further, the demonstration of columnar level specificity with 3D GRASE, despite contributions from both stimulated echoes and conventional T2 contrast, has made it an attractive alternative over 2D SE-EPI. Here, we assess the spatial specificity of cortical depth dependent 3D GRASE functional responses in human V1 and hMT by comparing it to GE responses. In doing so we demonstrate that 3D GRASE is less sensitive to contributions from large veins in superficial layers, while showing increased specificity (functional tuning) throughout the cortex compared to GE
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Measuring visual stimulation and attention signals in human superior colliculus using high-resolution fMRI
textThe superior colliculus (SC) is a laminated oculomotor structure in the midbrain. In non-human primates SC has long been known to contain a retinotopically-organized map of visual stimulation in its superficial layers, which is aligned to a map of saccadic eye movements in the deeper layers. Microstimulation and electrophysiology experiments have shown that SC also plays a key role in covert visuospatial attention and suggest that attentional modulation also occurs in a retinotopic manner. Retinotopic organization of the visual field can be non-invasively mapped in humans using functional MRI with a technique called phase-encoded retinotopy. In this technique, rotating wedges and expanding rings of visual stimuli are used to map the polar angle and eccentricity dimensions of a polar coordinates system, respectively. A similar technique can also be used to map spatial attention by keeping the visual stimulus constant and cueing subjects to attend to apertures of rotating wedges and expanding rings within the stimulus. A previous study using fMRI has shown the polar angle representation of visual stimulation in human SC but was unable to find a representation of eccentricity. This work uses high-resolution fMRI along with special surface analysis techniques developed in our lab to demonstrate maps of both polar angle and eccentricity for visual stimulation. Moreover, visual attention is also shown to be topographically organized within SC and in registration with visual stimulation. Finally, in human visual cortex, fMRI is known to show activity for sustained spatial attention even in the absence of a significant visual stimulus, an attentional "base response". In this work, SC is shown to exhibit a similar sustained attention base response using a threshold-contrast detection paradigm. This base response was compared with a response for attention with visual stimulation. The peak amplitude of the base response occurred more deeply within SC tissue than the peak for attention with stimulation. It is proposed that this reflects the specific attentional enhancement of the deeper visuomotor neurons, which are hypothesized to be a direct neuronal correlate of the oculomotor theory of attention.Psycholog