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Retinotopic mapping with spin echo BOLD at 7T

Cheryl A. OlmanabCorresponding Author Informationemail address, Pierre-Francois Van de Moorteleb, Jennifer F. Schumacherc, Joseph R. Guya, Kâmil Uğurbilb, Essa Yacoubb

Received 6 January 2010; received in revised form 17 March 2010; accepted 10 June 2010. published online 26 July 2010.
Corrected Proof

Abstract 

For blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) functional MRI experiments, contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) increases with increasing field strength for both gradient echo (GE) and spin echo (SE) BOLD techniques. However, susceptibility artifacts and nonuniform coil sensitivity profiles complicate large field-of-view fMRI experiments (e.g., experiments covering multiple visual areas instead of focusing on a single cortical region). Here, we use SE BOLD to acquire retinotopic mapping data in early visual areas, testing the feasibility of SE BOLD experiments spanning multiple cortical areas at 7T. We also use a recently developed method for normalizing signal intensity in T1-weighted anatomical images to enable automated segmentation of the cortical gray matter for scans acquired at 7T with either surface or volume coils. We find that the CNR of the 7T GE data (average single-voxel, single-scan stimulus coherence: 0.41) is almost twice that of the 3T GE BOLD data (average coherence: 0.25), with the CNR of the SE BOLD data (average coherence: 0.23) comparable to that of the 3T GE data. Repeated measurements in individual subjects find that maps acquired with 1.8-mm resolution at 3T and 7T with GE BOLD and at 7T with SE BOLD show no systematic differences in either the area or the boundary locations for V1, V2 and V3, demonstrating the feasibility of high-resolution SE BOLD experiments with good sensitivity throughout multiple visual areas.

a Department of Psychology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA

b Department of Radiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA

c Graduate Program in Neuroscience, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA

Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Departments of Psychology and Radiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA. Tel.: +1 612 626 7607; fax: +1 612 626 2079.

PII: S0730-725X(10)00158-X

doi:10.1016/j.mri.2010.06.001