35 research outputs found

    Population receptive field estimates of human auditory cortex.

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    Here we describe a method for measuring tonotopic maps and estimating bandwidth for voxels in human primary auditory cortex (PAC) using a modification of the population Receptive Field (pRF) model, developed for retinotopic mapping in visual cortex by Dumoulin and Wandell (2008). The pRF method reliably estimates tonotopic maps in the presence of acoustic scanner noise, and has two advantages over phase-encoding techniques. First, the stimulus design is flexible and need not be a frequency progression, thereby reducing biases due to habituation, expectation, and estimation artifacts, as well as reducing the effects of spatio-temporal BOLD nonlinearities. Second, the pRF method can provide estimates of bandwidth as a function of frequency. We find that bandwidth estimates are narrower for voxels within the PAC than in surrounding auditory responsive regions (non-PAC)

    Hemodynamic-informed parcellation of fMRI data in a Joint Detection Estimation framework

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    International audienceIdentifying brain hemodynamics in event-related functional MRI (fMRI) data is a crucial issue to disentangle the vascular response from the neuronal activity in the BOLD signal. This question is usually addressed by estimating the so-called Hemodynamic Response Function (HRF). Voxelwise or region-/parcelwise inference schemes have been proposed to achieve this goal but so far all known contributions commit to pre-specified spatial supports for the hemodynamic territories by defining these supports either as individual voxels or a priori fixed brain parcels. In this paper, we introduce a Joint Parcellation-Detection-Estimation (JPDE) procedure that incorporates an adaptive parcel identification step based upon local hemodynamic properties. Efficient inference of both evoked activity, HRF shapes and supports is then achieved using variational approximations. Validation on synthetic and real fMRI data demonstrate the JPDE performance over standard detection estimation schemes and suggest it as a new brain exploration tool

    Space as a Tool for Astrobiology: Review and Recommendations for Experimentations in Earth Orbit and Beyond

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    Adaptation: from single cells to BOLD signals

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    The receptive field in V1: an unexpected result.

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    The perception of human observers is modified by visual stimuli. I start with a brief description of the receptive fields of cells in the visual pathway of primates from the retina up to the primary visual cortex that is of how the electrical properties of these cells are driven by visual stimuli. Some recent evidence about contextual and direct responses of orientation selective cells in the primary visual cortex of monkeys to stimuli outside the receptive field is reviewed

    The receptive field in V1: an unexpected result.

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    I start with a brief description of the receptive fields of cells in the visual pathway of primates from the retina up to the primary visual cortex, that is of hoe thr electrical properties of these cells are driven by visual stimuli. Some recent evidence about contextual and direct responses of orientation selective cells in the primary visual cortex of monkeys to stimuli outside the receptive field is reviewed

    Modeling Adaptation Effects in fMRI Analysis

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    The standard general linear model (GLM) for rapid event-related fMRI design protocols typically ignores reduction in hemodynamic responses in successive stimuli in a train due to incomplete recovery from the preceding stimuli. To capture this adaptation effect, we incorporate a region-specific adaptation model into GLM. The model quantifies the rate of adaptation across brain regions, which is of interest in neuroscience. Empirical evaluation of the proposed model demonstrates its potential to improve detection sensitivity. In the fMRI experiments using visual and auditory stimuli, we observed that the adaptation effect is significantly stronger in the visual area than in the auditory area, suggesting that we must account for this effect to avoid bias in fMRI detection
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