THE LATEST AND GREATEST(?): IMAGING THE BRAIN
It's hard to find a
media story about the brain that doesn't refer to the latest technology for imaging the activity of the
brain, most often using Functional
Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI). This is a powerful tool for imaging ongoing brain activity in humans as
well as animals. As with structural
MRI that yields "still" images of the brain,
fMRI uses magnetic fields rather than radiation to image the tissue.
So, as far as we know, there is no
safety issue about long or repeated exposures (unless you have something in your body that can be magnetized).
fMRI depends on a
particularly useful property of hemoglobin, the molecule in red blood cells that carries oxygen to all tissues, including
those in the brain. As you may have
learned in biology class, oxygen is bound
to hemoglobin in the blood and is released from hemoglobin as blood perfuses tissues that need oxygen for
producing energy The magnetic
properties of hemoglobin change as the hemoglobin releases oxygen to tissues. Thus, the fMRI system looks for
changes in magnetic signals as
tissues consume oxygen. The signal is called the
blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal.
When neural circuits
are active, blood flow increases in those areas and oxygen is stripped from hemoglobin in the blood.
Thus the BOLD signal changes to reflect that
shift in the amount of hemoglobin that has oxygen bound to it. So literally, one can lie in an fMRI
machine and decide to wiggle
one's thumb and watch the brain activity associated with that movement. What you are really looking at is blood flow and
oxygen-consumption changes in the
brain areas that control that movement—not the electrical activity of the brain. The BOLD signal lags the
neuronal activity for one to two
seconds, and there is still controversy about what exactly triggers the
increased blood flow and oxygen delivery. But it
is safe to say that fMRI is measuring
brain activity.
fMRI has its limits.
First, there is the time issue we just mentioned, because the
signal lags the neural activity for a long time compared to the firing rate of neurons. Then there is the issue of
spatial resolution. The very best fMR. I resolution (at this writing) is a cube
that's about one millimeter on each
side—and that requires a machine with a very strong and expensive magnet. That one-millimeter cube contains
many neurons and synapses between
them. So, using an fMRI to examine brain circuits is a bit like looking at a low-resolution TV—there is
information there, but not as much as
one would like. Another problem is that it is not
possible to determine whether a BOLD
signal in a brain area is a result of that area transmitting information
or receiving information. All we can say is that
the area is active. Furthermore, we don't know the
result of that activity_
it may be stimulating or shutting down its neighbor by activating neurons
that normally slow down cells they contact.
Finally, the BOLD
signals are very small compared
to the background activity. This requires that the fiVIRI system average the images to reveal the relevant activity
of an area. To further emphasize the active area, colors are used and the
contrast is enhanced. Those techniques are very helpful to scientists but can produce images that are
misleading to nonscientists. One of us
was consulted by a major television network talk show about the effects of ecstasy as shown by brain images (not fMRI,
but it doesn't matter) of individuals
who had used the drug. The images had very
high contrast, and it appeared that the ecstasy users had "holes" in their brains. In fact, there was just a small
percentage difference in the true
signals, but the images had been enhanced to emphasize those differences. Nevertheless, they talked about ecstasy
producing holes in the brains of
users.
fMRI has been used to monitor brain activity in a
vast array of studies, ranging from epilepsy to lie detection. It has also been
used to image the response of the
brain to various drugs as scientists try and determine where in the brain a drug acts to produce a change
in behavior. To some extent this works. For example, one can show pictures of
cocaine to nonusers and compare
their response to the response of cocaine addicts. The BOLD images can vary remarkably between brain
areas. But it is hard to know exactly
what these changes mean.
First, individual variations make it hard to draw
conclusions about a particular
individual's responses. Doing studies with groups of people and averaging the group results produces reliable
images, but we are not yet at the
point of being able to image one individual and draw firm conclusions. Second, even if a brain area is reliably
activated in some circumstance, we
don't know enough about the brain to know exactly what each area does. Probably most important, brain
activities are executed by coordinated
signaling between a variety of areas, and fMRI may not be able to tell us the direction of signal flow or what role
an area is playing. Finally, variations
in signal strength may obscure proper interpretations. This could easily happen if a very small collection of
neurons exerted powerful effects on a
much larger circuit. The BOLD signal from the small number of neurons initiating the activity might not even be
visible, while the larger circuit
would dominate and appear to be the source of the activity
All of this is not to
say that fMRI and other brain imaging tools should be ignored. They are truly fantastic tools to begin
to understand the relationship between
behaviors and brain activities. As they become more refined, they may be able to reveal individual
differences that have diagnostic
meaning. But our advice at this moment is to view the nonscientific media with a degree of caution and to not be seduced
by pretty pictures.
WHY SHOULD ANYONE CARE ABOUT ALL OF THIS?
We hope that
this chapter offers some good reasons to develop a respect for the brain and the body that supports it, as well as
some insight into why drugs do
what they do. This is especially
important for teenagers, because as every
teenager knows, they are different from adults.
What adults may not
know is that the teenagers are right. For some time we have known that the very immature brain, as in babies, has a number
of characteristics that are different from
the adult brain. Now we are finding that
the adolescent brain may be different also. It may respond differently
to drugs, and it may learn differently.
A psychologist at Duke University, Dr.
David Rubin, carried out a fascinating
series of experiments showing just how different young people may be. The basic experiment was to take adults at
various ages and ask them questions about events that occurred in every
ten-year period of their lives, including
a lot of trivia. Of course, recent events were remembered fairly well, but other than those, the events best
recalled were those that occurred during young adulthood (from age
eleven to age thirty). This means that a senior
citizen recalled his life events and what was going on in the world during
his adolescence even better than those
events that had occurred just
a few
years earlier.
If
our conclusions from this research are correct, then there is something
very special about either our brain biochemistry
or our psychological state during
adolescence that enables us to store our experiences for life. Whatever the explanation, the implications are clear—the experiences, good or bad, that we have during our youth are very well stored in our
"sober" memory systems and can be
recalled for the rest of our lives. Thus,
when teenagers say they are different, they are right, and when adults say that these are formative years, they, too,
are right.