Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.

An investigation of long timescale (5 minutes) fMRI neuronal adaptation effects, based on retinotopic mapping and spatial frequency stimuli, is presented in this paper. A hierarchical linear model was developed to quantify the adaptation effects in the visual cortex. The analysis of data involved st...

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Autores principales: Xingfeng Li, Damien Coyle, Liam Maguire, Thomas M McGinnity, Robert F Hess
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Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/8cf52604f2744c0f85e95a5b3aa70da9
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:8cf52604f2744c0f85e95a5b3aa70da92021-11-18T07:35:23ZLong timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.1932-620310.1371/journal.pone.0026562https://doaj.org/article/8cf52604f2744c0f85e95a5b3aa70da92011-01-01T00:00:00Zhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/pmid/22065999/?tool=EBIhttps://doaj.org/toc/1932-6203An investigation of long timescale (5 minutes) fMRI neuronal adaptation effects, based on retinotopic mapping and spatial frequency stimuli, is presented in this paper. A hierarchical linear model was developed to quantify the adaptation effects in the visual cortex. The analysis of data involved studying the retinotopic mapping and spatial frequency adaptation effects in the amblyopic cortex. Our results suggest that, firstly, there are many cortical regions, including V1, where neuronal adaptation effects are reduced in the cortex in response to amblyopic eye stimulation. Secondly, our results show the regional contribution is different, and it seems to start from V1 and spread to the extracortex regions. Thirdly, our results show that there is greater adaptation to broadband retinotopic mapping as opposed to narrowband spatial frequency stimulation of the amblyopic eye, and we find significant correlation between fMRI response and the magnitude of the adaptation effect, suggesting that the reduced adaptation may be a consequence of the reduced response to different stimuli reported for amblyopic eyes.Xingfeng LiDamien CoyleLiam MaguireThomas M McGinnityRobert F HessPublic Library of Science (PLoS)articleMedicineRScienceQENPLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 10, p e26562 (2011)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language EN
topic Medicine
R
Science
Q
spellingShingle Medicine
R
Science
Q
Xingfeng Li
Damien Coyle
Liam Maguire
Thomas M McGinnity
Robert F Hess
Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
description An investigation of long timescale (5 minutes) fMRI neuronal adaptation effects, based on retinotopic mapping and spatial frequency stimuli, is presented in this paper. A hierarchical linear model was developed to quantify the adaptation effects in the visual cortex. The analysis of data involved studying the retinotopic mapping and spatial frequency adaptation effects in the amblyopic cortex. Our results suggest that, firstly, there are many cortical regions, including V1, where neuronal adaptation effects are reduced in the cortex in response to amblyopic eye stimulation. Secondly, our results show the regional contribution is different, and it seems to start from V1 and spread to the extracortex regions. Thirdly, our results show that there is greater adaptation to broadband retinotopic mapping as opposed to narrowband spatial frequency stimulation of the amblyopic eye, and we find significant correlation between fMRI response and the magnitude of the adaptation effect, suggesting that the reduced adaptation may be a consequence of the reduced response to different stimuli reported for amblyopic eyes.
format article
author Xingfeng Li
Damien Coyle
Liam Maguire
Thomas M McGinnity
Robert F Hess
author_facet Xingfeng Li
Damien Coyle
Liam Maguire
Thomas M McGinnity
Robert F Hess
author_sort Xingfeng Li
title Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
title_short Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
title_full Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
title_fullStr Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
title_full_unstemmed Long timescale fMRI neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
title_sort long timescale fmri neuronal adaptation effects in human amblyopic cortex.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
publishDate 2011
url https://doaj.org/article/8cf52604f2744c0f85e95a5b3aa70da9
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AT liammaguire longtimescalefmrineuronaladaptationeffectsinhumanamblyopiccortex
AT thomasmmcginnity longtimescalefmrineuronaladaptationeffectsinhumanamblyopiccortex
AT robertfhess longtimescalefmrineuronaladaptationeffectsinhumanamblyopiccortex
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