pubmed-article:12123569 | pubmed:abstractText | A prevailing assumption in neuroimaging studies is that relatively low fMRI signals are due to weak neuronal activation, and, therefore, they are commonly ignored. However, lower fMRI signals may also result from intense activation by highly selective, albeit small, subsets of neurons in the imaged voxel. We report on an approach that could form a basis for resolving this ambiguity imposed by the low (mm range) spatial resolution of fMRI. Our approach employs fMR-adaptation as an indicator for highly active neuronal populations even when the measured fMRI signal is low. | lld:pubmed |