Local haemodynamic changes associated with neural activity in auditory cortex

Robert V. Harrison, Noam Harel, Hormoz Hamrahi, Jaswinder Panesar, Naoki Mori, Richard J. Mount

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

15 Scopus citations

Abstract

We used an optical technique to study haemodynamic changes associated with acoustically driven activity in auditory cortex of the chinchilla. Such changes are first detectable c. 0.5 s after stimulation, peak at 2-3 s, and decay within a further 3-6 s. This intrinsic signal imaging reveals activity in separate cortical areas, including primary auditory cortex (AI), secondary auditory cortex (AII) and an anterior auditory field (AAF). We have measured the timing of haemodynamics associated with each area, and find that AI has a different time course from AII and AAF; its haemodynamic change recovers more rapidly. We also show that within AI and AII, place specific activity related to acoustic stimulus frequency can be resolved by this optical imaging method. Our results show the close association between blood flow change and the local metabolic demands of neural activity. The data provide information about the potential of other functional imaging methods (e.g. PET, fMRI) which rely on activity related haemodynamic events.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)255-258
Number of pages4
JournalActa Oto-Laryngologica
Volume120
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - 2000

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This study was supported by the Medical Research Council of Canada and the Masonic Foundation of Ontario.

Keywords

  • Auditory cortex
  • Chinchilla
  • Cortical haemodynamics
  • Optical imaging of intrinsic signals
  • Secondary auditory fields

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