In this study we demonstrate the importance of distributed sampling of peristimulus time in blocked design fMRI studies. Distributed sampling ensures all the components of an event-related hemodynamic response are sampled and avoids the bias incurred when stimulus presentation is time-locked to data acquisition. We found that differences in the temporal offset between stimulus presentation and data acquisition had a significant effect on some language-related activations. These effects, induced by simply shifting stimulus presentation by a fraction of the interscan interval, suggest that fixed sampling does indeed bias estimated responses, even in blocked designs.