Cortical Folding Flashcards
1
Q
Theories of Cortical Folding
A
- Limited volume of the skull
- Axonal Tension Hypothesis
- Radial Expansion Hypothesis
- Differential Tangential Expansion Hypothesis (not rejected, has more evidence)
2
Q
Study Brain’s Anatomy in vivo
A
- MRI (Magnetic Resonance Imaging)
- fMRI (Functional Magnetic Reasonance Imaging)
3
Q
MRI
A
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- Use magnetic field to image the brain
- Different types of images depending on research
- Darker = cortex
- Strength of magnet determines the spatial resolution
4
Q
fMRI
A
- Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
- More active areas require more blood for glucose and oxygen consumption
- Measure changes in blood flow
- BOLD: Blood Oxygen Level Dependent
- Measure changes in blood flow
- IS NOT DIRECT MEASURE OF NEURAL ACTIVITY
- Task-based fMRI:
- measure changes during behavioural task compared to control task
- Resting-state:
- Brain activity at rest
- Functional activations are overload onto structural MRI images for anatomical context.
- activations = heat maps
5
Q
Standard Atlas of Talairach and Tournoux
A
- Created by fitting a single brain into a stereotaxic space
- Brodmann’s Areas were overlaid
- Created for neurosurgeons
- Picked up for neuroimaging researchers to make sense of the location of activation peaks.
6
Q
MNI Stereotaxic Space
A
- Standard imaging space created by Montreal neurological Institute
- used around the world
- Generated by averaging dozens of MRI scans
- template or average brain
- Standard coordinate system
- Registering subject’s MRI scan into MNI space
- spatial normalization
- Allows to make comparaisons
7
Q
L5 p.27 - 30 Read
A