Abstract

Accurate identification of regions that show activity changes in response to functional expression is necessary to understand the mechanisms underlying functional expression in the brain. Quantitative activity-induced manganese-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (qAIM-MRI) is a noninvasive whole-brain activity history imaging method used for this purpose. Notably, qAIM-MRI is a pseudo-Ca2+ imaging method that uses Mn2+ as a surrogate marker for Ca2+. In this paper, I describe the principles, applications, and limitations of qAIM-MRI.

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