Synchronized delta oscillations correlate with the resting-state functional MRI signal

Hanbing Lu(National Institutes of Health), Yantao Zuo(National Institutes of Health), Hong Gu(National Institutes of Health), James A. Waltz(University of Maryland, Baltimore), Zhan Wang(National Institutes of Health), Clara A. Scholl(National Institutes of Health), William Rea(National Institutes of Health), Yihong Yang(National Institutes of Health), Elliot A. Stein(National Institutes of Health)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
November 9, 2007
Cited by 433Open Access
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Abstract

Synchronized low-frequency spontaneous fluctuations of the functional MRI (fMRI) signal have recently been applied to investigate large-scale neuronal networks of the brain in the absence of specific task instructions. However, the underlying neural mechanisms of these fluctuations remain largely unknown. To this end, electrophysiological recordings and resting-state fMRI measurements were conducted in alpha-chloralose-anesthetized rats. Using a seed-voxel analysis strategy, region-specific, anesthetic dose-dependent fMRI resting-state functional connectivity was detected in bilateral primary somatosensory cortex (S1FL) of the resting brain. Cortical electroencephalographic signals were also recorded from bilateral S1FL; a visual cortex locus served as a control site. Results demonstrate that, unlike the evoked fMRI response that correlates with power changes in the gamma bands, the resting-state fMRI signal correlates with the power coherence in low-frequency bands, particularly the delta band. These data indicate that hemodynamic fMRI signal differentially registers specific electrical oscillatory frequency band activity, suggesting that fMRI may be able to distinguish the ongoing from the evoked activity of the brain.


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