Since its discovery in the early 1990s, functional MRI has been the
basis for more than 19.000 studies of the living, working brain. The
technique allows scientists an unprecedented glimpse of the brain
regions that are most active during particular tasks or state of mind,
but it does not do so directly: the scans measure blood flow, which
seems to increase around neurons that are firing. Neurons are not
directly connected to blood vessels, however, so until now the mechanism
underlying fMRI's robust success has been a mystery.

Now a team from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology reveals that
the support cells dubbed astrocytes (because of their star shaped
bodies) form the link between neurons and blood vessels. The
neuroscientists used a technique called two-photon microscopy, which
harnesses light particles to image very small structures, to observe
cells in ferrets` brains. As the animals were shown different animated
graphics, neurons responded within milliseconds, and astrocytes became
active second later matching the time delay that neuroimagers have long
known accompanies blood flow to active brain regions. When the M.I.T.
team blocked astrocyte function, the ferrets` neurons fired as usual,
but blood flow did not increase.

When researchers use fMRI, co-author Mriganka Sur explains, "We are
really measuring astrocyte activation. Thus, anything that influences
astrocytes is like to influences fMRI scans, because astrocytes may be
subject to a different set of genetic and environmental influences than
neurons are. But the more researchers understand about what is really
happening when the brain "light up" in an fMRI scan, the better
they will be able to use the technology to learn about human cognition.




Happy Learning,

Yovan P. Putra

www.primastudy.com <http://www.primastudy.com>




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