Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University === This thesis explored multimodal brain imaging using advanced spatiotemporal techniques. The first set of experiments were based on simulations. Much controversy exists in the literature regarding the differences between magnetoencephalography (MEG) and electroen...
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ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-334772019-07-16T03:02:26Z Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy Goldenholz, Daniel Mordechai Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University This thesis explored multimodal brain imaging using advanced spatiotemporal techniques. The first set of experiments were based on simulations. Much controversy exists in the literature regarding the differences between magnetoencephalography (MEG) and electroencephalography (EEG}, both practically and theoretically. The differences were explored using simulations that evaluated the expected signal-to-noise ratios from reasonable brain sources. MEG and EEG were found to be complementary, with each modality optimally suited to image activity from different areas of the cortical surface. Consequently, evaluations of epileptic patients and general neuroscience experiments will both benefit from simultaneously collected MEG/EEG. The second set of experiments represent an example of MEG combined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and functional MRI (fMRI) applied to healthy subjects. The study set out to resolve two questions relating to shape perception. First, does the brain activate functional areas sequentially during shape perception, as has been suggested in recent literature? Second, which , if any, functional areas are active time-locked with reaction-time? The study found that functional areas are non-sequentially activated, and that area IT is active time-locked with reaction-time. These two points, coupled with the method for multimodal integration , can help further develop our understanding of shape perception in particular, and cortical dynamics in general for healthy subjects. Broadly, these two studies represent practical guidelines for epilepsy evaluations and brain mapping studies. For epilepsy studies, clinicians could combine MEG and EEG to maximize the probability of finding the source of seizures. For brain mapping in general, EEG, MEG, MRI and fMRI can be combined in the methods outlined here to obtain more sophisticated views of cortical dynamics. 2019-02-22T04:10:31Z 2019-02-22T04:10:31Z 2006 2006 Thesis/Dissertation b26962202 https://hdl.handle.net/2144/33477 11719022880308 99193549770001161 en_US This work is being made available in OpenBU by permission of its author, and is available for research purposes only. All rights are reserved to the author. Boston University |
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Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston University === This thesis explored multimodal brain imaging using advanced
spatiotemporal techniques. The first set of experiments were based on
simulations. Much controversy exists in the literature regarding the differences
between magnetoencephalography (MEG) and electroencephalography (EEG},
both practically and theoretically. The differences were explored using
simulations that evaluated the expected signal-to-noise ratios from reasonable brain sources. MEG and EEG were found to be complementary, with each
modality optimally suited to image activity from different areas of the cortical
surface. Consequently, evaluations of epileptic patients and general
neuroscience experiments will both benefit from simultaneously collected
MEG/EEG. The second set of experiments represent an example of MEG
combined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and functional MRI (fMRI)
applied to healthy subjects. The study set out to resolve two questions relating to
shape perception. First, does the brain activate functional areas sequentially
during shape perception, as has been suggested in recent literature? Second,
which , if any, functional areas are active time-locked with reaction-time? The
study found that functional areas are non-sequentially activated, and that area IT
is active time-locked with reaction-time. These two points, coupled with the
method for multimodal integration , can help further develop our understanding of
shape perception in particular, and cortical dynamics in general for healthy
subjects. Broadly, these two studies represent practical guidelines for epilepsy
evaluations and brain mapping studies. For epilepsy studies, clinicians could
combine MEG and EEG to maximize the probability of finding the source of
seizures. For brain mapping in general, EEG, MEG, MRI and fMRI can be
combined in the methods outlined here to obtain more sophisticated views of
cortical dynamics. |
author |
Goldenholz, Daniel Mordechai |
spellingShingle |
Goldenholz, Daniel Mordechai Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
author_facet |
Goldenholz, Daniel Mordechai |
author_sort |
Goldenholz, Daniel Mordechai |
title |
Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
title_short |
Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
title_full |
Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
title_fullStr |
Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
title_full_unstemmed |
Spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
title_sort |
spatiotemporal techniques in multimodal imaging for brain mapping and epilepsy |
publisher |
Boston University |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/2144/33477 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT goldenholzdanielmordechai spatiotemporaltechniquesinmultimodalimagingforbrainmappingandepilepsy |
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1719224089728516096 |