Recent neuroimaging studies have lead to the proposal that rest is characterized by an organized, baseline level of activity, a default mode of brain function that is suspended during specific goal-oriented mental activity. Previous studies have shown that the primary function subserved by the default mode is that of an introspectively oriented, self-referential mode of mental activity. The default mode of brain function hypothesis is readdressed from the perspective of the presence of low-frequency blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) signal changes (0.012-0.1 Hz) in the resting brain. The results show that the brain during rest is not tonically active in a single mode of brain function. Rather, the findings presented here suggest that the brain recurrently toggles between an introspectively oriented mode (default mode) and a state-of-mind that tentatively might be interpreted as an extrospectively oriented mode that involves a readiness and alertness to changes in the external and internal environment.
In the absence of any overt task performance, it has been shown that spontaneous, intrinsic brain activity is expressed as systemwide, resting-state networks in the adult brain. However, the route to adult patterns of resting-state activity through neuronal development in the human brain is currently unknown. Therefore, we used functional MRI to map patterns of resting-state activity in infants during sleep. We found five unique resting-states networks in the infant brain that encompassed the primary visual cortex, bilateral sensorimotor areas, bilateral auditory cortex, a network including the precuneus area, lateral parietal cortex, and the cerebellum as well as an anterior network that incorporated the medial and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. These results suggest that resting-state networks driven by spontaneous signal fluctuations are present already in the infant brain. The potential link between the emergence of behavior and patterns of resting-state activity in the infant brain is discussed.development ͉ functional MRI ͉ spontaneous activity R ecent research on functional connectivity in the brain, in particular during resting-state conditions, has come to focus on low-frequency (Ͻ0.1 Hz), spontaneous fluctuations in the functional MRI (fMRI) signal. Discovered by Biswal et al. (1), it has been shown that systemwide networks in the resting brain are synchronized in time through intrinsic low-frequency signal fluctuations. Whereas early fMRI studies demonstrated synchronicity of intrinsic brain activity across hemispheres in primary sensory cortices (2, 3), succeeding studies have shown temporal synchronization in a resting-state network encompassing higher-order cortices (4). A systematic investigation of resting-state activity in the adult human brain was recently presented by Damoiseaux et al. (5). Using independentcomponent analysis (ICA), a data-driven explorative data analysis approach, they showed that there are numerous networks in the brain that are driven by spontaneous activity. Besides networks that are in part or fully described by the previously reported default mode (6) and task-positive network (7, 8), they found consistent patterns of resting-state activity in the visual cortex, sensorimotor areas, auditory areas, as well as extrastriate brain regions. These findings together with previous investigations on spontaneous activity suggest that the assumption that the brain during rest is idle and waiting to be triggered and respond to changes in the environment is not strictly valid. Rather, in addition to responding to changes in external stimuli or tasks, the brain is characterized by intrinsic dynamics in the form of coherent and spontaneous fluctuations, clustered together in networks that are credible from an anatomical and functional perspective.Interestingly, recent studies have presented evidence that spontaneous activity is relevant for human behavior. Momentary lapses of attention, affecting goal-oriented behavior on a global/ local selective attention task, were related to a fai...
The functional network topology of the adult human brain has recently begun to be noninvasively mapped using resting-state functional connectivity magnetic resonance imaging and described using mathematical tools originating from graph theory. Previous studies have revealed the existence of disproportionally connected brain regions, so called cortical hubs, which act as information convergence zones and supposedly capture key aspects of how the brain's architecture supports human behavior and how it is affected by disease. In this study, we present results showing that cortical hubs and their associated cortical networks are largely confined to primary sensory and motor brain regions in the infant brain. Our findings in infants stand in stark contrast to the situation found in adults where the majority of cortical hubs and hub-related networks are located in heteromodal association cortex. Our findings suggest that the functional network architecture in infants is linked to support tasks that are of a perception-action nature.
Placebo analgesia and reward processing share several features. For instance, expectations have a strong influence on the subsequent emotional experience of both. Recent imaging data indicate similarities in the underlying neuronal network. We hypothesized that placebo analgesia is a special case of reward processing and that placebo treatment could modulate emotional perception in the same way as does pain perception. The behavioral part of this study indicates that placebo treatment has an effect on how subjects perceive unpleasant pictures. Furthermore, event-related fMRI demonstrated that the same modulatory network, including the rostral anterior cingulate cortex and the lateral orbitofrontal cortex, is involved in both emotional placebo and placebo analgesia. These effects were correlated with the reported placebo effect and were predicted by the amount of treatment expectation induced on a previous day. Thus, the placebo effect may be considered to be a general process of modulation induced by the subjects' expectations.
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