Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Conscious Animals: A New Tool in Behavioural Neuroscience Research

2006 
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is a unique window to the brain, enabling scientists to follow changes in brain activity in response to hormones, ageing, environment, drugs of abuse and other stimuli. There are two features that make fMRI unique when compared with other imaging modalities used in behavioural neuroscience. First, it can be entirely noninvasive: each animal can serve as its own control over the natural course of its life, vital for following neuroadaptation and other developmental processes critical to understanding behaviour. Second, fMRI has the spatial and temporal resolution to observe patterns of neuronal activity across the entire brain in less than a minute. Although fMRI does not have the cellular spatial resolution of immunostaining, nor the millisecond temporal resolution of electrophysiology, synchronised changes in neuronal activity across multiple brain areas seen with functional MRI can be viewed as functional neuroanatomical circuits coordinating the thoughts, memories and emotions for particular behaviours. Thus, fMRI affords a systems approach to the study of the brain, complementing and building from other neurobiological techniques to understand how behaviour is organised across multiple brain regions. In this review, we present a general background to fMRI and the different imaging modalities that can be used in fMRI studies. Included are examples of the application of fMRI in behavioural neuroscience research, along with discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of this technology.
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