The Journal of Neuroscience, 1999, 19:RC17:1-6
RAPID COMMUNICATION
Continuous Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Reveals
Dynamic Nonlinearities of "Dose-Response" Curves for Finger
Opposition
Gregory S.
Berns1, 3,
Allen W.
Song2, and
Hui
Mao2
Departments of 1 Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and
2 Radiology, Emory University School of Medicine,
Atlanta, Georgia 30322, and 3 School of Psychology,
Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, Georgia 30332
Linear experimental designs have dominated the field of functional
neuroimaging, but although successful at mapping regions of relative
brain activation, the technique assumes that both cognition and brain
activation are linear processes. To test these assumptions, we
performed a continuous functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
experiment of finger opposition. Subjects performed a visually paced
bimanual finger-tapping task. The frequency of finger tapping was
continuously varied between 1 and 5 Hz, without any rest blocks. After
continuous acquisition of fMRI images, the task-related brain regions
were identified with independent components analysis (ICA). When the
time courses of the task-related components were plotted against
tapping frequency, nonlinear "dose- response" curves were
obtained for most subjects. Nonlinearities appeared in both the static
and dynamic sense, with hysteresis being prominent in several subjects.
The ICA decomposition also demonstrated the spatial dynamics with
different components active at different times. These results suggest
that the brain response to tapping frequency does not scale linearly,
and that it is history-dependent even after accounting for the
hemodynamic response function. This implies that finger tapping, as
measured with fMRI, is a nonstationary process. When analyzed with a
conventional general linear model, a strong correlation to tapping
frequency was identified, but the spatiotemporal dynamics were not apparent.
Key words:
fMRI; nonlinear; dynamics; motor function; individual
differences; cortex; cerebellum; ICA
Copyright © 1999 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/99/$05.00/0