Seminari INFN

Using Physics to Image the Functioning Human Brain

by Prof. A. Mandelkern (Physics Dept. University of California Irvine, CA)

Europe/Rome
Aula Conversi (Ed. G. Marconi)

Aula Conversi

Ed. G. Marconi

Description
Until the last century medical practitioners and researchers relied almost exclusively on their native senses (vision, hearing, feel, taste, smell) to observe their patients and subjects. Examination of the brain poses a particularly difficult problem because it is encased by a rigid, opaque shell protected by the physiological blood-brain barrier. The discovery of X-rays led to the first of many methods which have extended our observations to other sources of contrast, including mean Z (photoelectric absorption), acoustical impedance ( reflection/ transmission of ultrasound), proton density and local magnetic environment (nuclear magnetic resonance), tissue color in the infrared (near-infrared diffuse opticalspectroscopy). More recent advances permit imaging of physiological function, such as measuring small electric potentials and magnetic fields to localize current sources in nerves and muscles, and imaging optical, magnetic and nuclear moieties attached to active molecular tracers. I will discuss several methods used in imaging the functioning human brain, including electrophysiological imaging, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging, and molecular imaging with magnetic and nuclear tracers.
Slides