Cognitive Neuroscience - Lectures (Utrecht University)
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Diffusion-weighted imaging – measures the direction of water movement by comparing responses to magnetic fields in different directions. Shows neural fibre bundles.
Functional MRI – measures how tissue magnetic interactions change over time. Examines the blood flow and oxygenation. Neural activity changes when subject is exposed to a stimulus.
MRI & fMRI advantages:
Disadvantages:
How does MRI work?
The signal depends on:
Deoxygenated blood causes signal loss.
Why does fmri work?:
Important: effect 2 does not compensate accurately for effect 1
So oxyhemoglobin concentration increases due to increased blood flow.
Relation between neural activity and BOLD (black is neural activity):
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
LFP: synaptic activity = neural processing
fMRI is slightly better correlated with LFP. So BOLD signals reflect synaptic activity.
What limits the temporal resolution of fMRI?
Perception: a translation of the physical environment into a pattern of neural activity that can be used by our brain to guide behavior. Perception is a set of tricks to extract useful (not an accurate!!) information from the environment.
The ganglion cells look at change in color: contrast.
Visual convergence:
We need to match the details of the image to the properties of the (visual) cell:
So the top cell responds well to the first image and the bottom cell responds well to the third image. So we use the differently sized receptive field cells to perceive different properties in images.
The images we see is mapped in the visual cortex:
Orientation-cells only respond to cells in a specific orientation. This is the relation between preferred orientation and track distance:
There are two visual pathways:
V2 looks for patterns in the images it receives. V1 does not.
The middle stages of visual processing look at common patterns in the output from the first stage.
We use our imagination to use previously seen patterns and structures. So we use context from things we’ve seen before to map images.
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In this bundle you can find the lecture notes from the course 'Cognitive Neuroscience' at Utrecht University. Good luck studying!
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