gratton & fabiani (2001). hemodynamic techniques: pet and fmri useful for spatial information...

39
Gratton & Fabiani (2001)

Upload: clifford-rose

Post on 16-Jan-2016

219 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Gratton & Fabiani (2001)

Page 2: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Hemodynamic techniques: PET and fMRI useful for spatial information

about neural activity

Electromagnetic techniques: EEG and MEG useful for temporal information

about neural activity

Page 3: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Hemodynamic techniques lack temporal specificity and electromagnetic techniques lack spatial specificity.

EROS provides both, good temporal and spatial information.

Page 4: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Fiber optic cables act as sources and detectors.

Sources have just one fiber, detectors have many.

Sources carry light from lasers or LEDs.

Photomotopliers function as detectors of photons.

Page 5: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:
Page 6: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

If photons are emitted from a light-source (fiber optic) against the surface of a semi-infinite, homogenous object they can be modeled using the same equations as those that describe the positive half of a dipole.

Depth in the case of EROS depends partially on the distance between the source and detector.

Page 7: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

As light propagates from the source it gets scattered and absorbed by brain tissue. Changes in the activity of brain tissue affect

the amount of scattering and absorption. Scattering causes the photons to have a

longer transit time from source to detector.▪ Therefore, scattering (activity) can be estimated

from the increase in transit time/phase delay.

Page 8: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Inte

nsity

Time

Input

Output

Page 9: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Visual stimulation experiment shows transit time increase for activated areas mm apart.

Page 10: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Comparison found good temporal and spatial overlap with ERPs and fMRI.

Page 11: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Changes in neuronal membrane affect transparency of membrane and diffraction.

Page 12: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Neuronal membranes distend/shrink as ions + H2O move in/out after an action potential.

Page 13: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Pros: Good temporal resolution (milliseconds) Good spatial resolution (<1cm) Useful for studying neurovascular coupling

Cons: Penetration from scalp is limited to 3-5cm

(cortex) Low signal-to-noise ratio requires averaging

▪ Marianna’s question #1▪ Pulse correction, phase rejection, movement artifact

Page 14: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

CNL EROS Video

Page 15: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Tse, Lee, Sullivan, Garnsey, Dell, Fabiani and Gratton (2007)

Page 16: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

How do the temporal cortex and inferior frontal cortex interact? fMRI is too slow to view this interaction

Does processing differ for syntactic vs. semantic anomaly?

Can EROS image interactions between cortical areas?

Page 17: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Identifies three functional components: Memory: store of

language information, involved in retrieval

Unification: integration of lexically retrieved information

Control: language to action, such as choose between using one of two languages

C

U

M

Page 18: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Increased response in left inferior frontal when unification load is increased (in response to anomalous critical word). A lesser response also occurs for correct sentences.

Page 19: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Model emphasizes that posterior and dorsal areas integrate syntactic information, while anterior and ventral areas function more for semantic integration.

But, there is a lot of overlap. Preview of Albert’s

question Little evidence

extending this functional specialization to the temporal lobe.

Page 20: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

16 participants All right-handed native English

speakers 11 females and 5 females, ages 18-30

Lucy’s question: Why the disproportionate # of

females? Control for sinistrality?

Page 21: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Each participant saw 864 sentences 336 unacceptable sentences

▪ 144 were semantically anomalous at the final word “The hungry child ate the floor.”

▪ 48 filler sentences contained semantically anomalous words in medial position to prevent expectations that anomalies only occur in the final position

▪ 96 had grammatical violations of subject verb agreement▪ “If work isn’t done, it pile…”

▪ 48 had grammatically incorrect pronoun case ▪ “My mother promised to buy I…”

Page 22: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

528 acceptable sentences 144 controls for the semantic sentences 96 for syntactic subject verb agreement 48 for pronoun case anomaly 240 sentences to ensure subjects expect most sentences to be

acceptable Length and frequency was accounted for across

conditions. Israel’s questions-

Couldn’t syntactic anomaly be sentence-final? (When it rains, it pour(s)”

How long is the experiment? ▪ Approx. 10 hours total broken up into two 5-hour sessions.

Page 23: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Sentences were presented word-by-word at the center of screen and subjects had to judge if sentence was well-formed.

Page 24: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

ERPs were recorded. EEG recording used four scalp

electrodes (Fz, Cz, Pz, and right mastoid). ▪ Final bandpass filter of 0.1-20Hz▪ Sampled at 100Hz▪ Time-locked 1500 ms epochs with 200ms pre-stimulus onset

Page 25: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

EROS recording used two montages.▪ Laser diodes emitted 830nm light at 220MHz which was picked up by PMTs modulated at ~220MHz

Sources, detectors, nasion, preauricular points and random points were digitally localized using a Fastrak 3D digitizer.

Coregistration with individual subject’s anatomy provided by MRI.

Page 26: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

128 source-detector pairs per montage

Page 27: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Most sentences were classified correctly: Semantically acceptable- 94% Semantically unacceptable- 95% Syntactically unacceptable – 86% Syntactically acceptable- 88%

Analyses were performed only on these correct trials.

Page 28: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Semantic unacceptable –acceptable Difference

waveform computed from 200-500ms peaking at 420ms (p<.001)

Page 29: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Syntactically unacceptable –acceptable Difference

waveform computed from 500-1500 peaking at 860 ms (p<.001)

Page 30: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Significant increase in phase delay for anomalous critical words.

Both conditions elicited S/MTC activation followed by IFC activation. Pattern occurred a few times for semantic

condition suggesting oscillatory behavior. ROIs analyzed independently

Page 31: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:
Page 32: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:
Page 33: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Different areas activated for each condition up to ~665ms. Semantic = ventral

anterior/middle Syntactic = dorsal posterior

temporal More frontal activation for

semantic anomaly, but lots of overlap.

EROS signals predicted the N400 (@179ms, 384ms in S/MTC) and P600 (@ 819ms, 914ms in IFC)in semantic and syntactic condition, respectively, but not vice versa. Double dissociation in EROS/ERP

Page 34: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Contrasts were 17mm apart along inferior -superior, but not anterior-posterior

After 655ms there was no reliable differences between the activity for contrasts. Albert’s question

▪ Potentially due to response▪ Hagoort’s model

Page 35: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

EROS successfully showed interaction between temporal-frontal network involved in language processing. Supports model in which retrieval occurs

in the temporal regions and the integration occurs in the frontal regions.

Page 36: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Might reflect integration process in IFC in which predictions about upcoming words are generated and sent to temporal areas. Marianna’s question # 1 Lucy’s question # 1 & 2 Lynn’s Question

Since syntactic anomalies were relatively easy to rectify there was little frontal activity.

Semantic anomaly more difficult to correct and hence more back and forth.▪ More extensive frontal activity▪ Double checks retrieval?

The location of these networks is consistent with previous fMRI studies.

Page 37: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Syntactic words were in medial position while semantic were final. Is activation comparable for sentence

medial and sentence final positions?

Page 38: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques:

Effect is still present just smaller, as is usually the case.

Page 39: Gratton & Fabiani (2001).  Hemodynamic techniques:  PET and fMRI useful for spatial information about neural activity  Electromagnetic techniques: