Joseph B. Mandeville
Harvard University
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Featured researches published by Joseph B. Mandeville.
Nature Neuroscience | 2003
Doris Y. Tsao; Winrich A. Freiwald; Tamara A. Knutsen; Joseph B. Mandeville; Roger B. H. Tootell
How are different object categories organized by the visual system? Current evidence indicates that monkeys and humans process object categories in fundamentally different ways. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies suggest that humans have a ventral temporal face area, but such evidence is lacking in macaques. Instead, face-responsive neurons in macaques seem to be scattered throughout temporal cortex, with some relative concentration in the superior temporal sulcus (STS). Here, using fMRI in alert fixating macaque monkeys and humans, we found that macaques do have discrete face-selective patches, similar in relative size and number to face patches in humans. The face patches were embedded within a large swath of object-selective cortex extending from V4 to rostral TE. This large region responded better to pictures of intact objects compared to scrambled objects, with different object categories eliciting different patterns of activity, as in the human. Overall, our results suggest that humans and macaques share a similar brain architecture for visual object processing.
Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow and Metabolism | 1999
Joseph B. Mandeville; John J. A. Marota; Cenk Ayata; Greg Zaharchuk; Michael A. Moskowitz; Bruce R. Rosen; Robert M. Weisskoff
A pronounced temporal mismatch was observed between the responses of relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV) measured by magnetic resonance imaging and relative cerebral blood flow measured by laser—Doppler flowmetry in rat somatosensory cortex after electrical forepaw stimulation, The increase of relative cerebral blood flow after stimulus onset and decrease after stimulus cessation were accurately described with a single exponential time constant of 2.4 ± 0.8 seconds. In contrast, rCBV exhibited two distinct and nearly sequential processes after both onset and cessation of stimulation. A rapid change of rCBV (1.5 ± 0.8 seconds) occurring immediately after onset and cessation was not statistically different from the time constant for relative cerebral blood flow. However, a slow phase of increase (onset) and decrease (cessation) with an exponential time constant of 14 ± 13 seconds began approximately 8 seconds after the rapid phase of CBV change. A modified windkessel model was developed to describe the temporal evolution of rCBV as a rapid elastic response of capillaries and veins followed by slow venous relaxation of stress. Venous delayed compliance was suggested as the mechanism for the poststimulus undershoot in blood oxygen-sensitive magnetic resonance imaging signal that has been observed in this animal model and in human data.
NeuroImage | 2001
David A. Boas; Tom Gaudette; Gary E. Strangman; Xuefeng Cheng; John J. A. Marota; Joseph B. Mandeville
Near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) can detect changes in the concentrations of oxy-hemoglobin ([HbO]) and deoxy-hemoglobin ([Hb]) in tissue based upon differential absorption at multiple wavelengths. The common analysis of NIRS data uses the modified Beer-Lambert law, which is an empirical formulation that assumes global concentration changes. We used simulations to examine the errors that result when this analysis is applied to focal hemodynamic changes, and we performed simultaneous NIRS measurements during a motor task in adult humans and a neonate to evaluate the dependence of the measured changes on detector-probe geometry. For both simulations and in vivo measurements, the wide range of NIRS results was compared to an imaging analysis, diffuse optical tomography (DOT). The results demonstrate that relative changes in [HbO] and [Hb] cannot, in general, be quantified with NIRS. In contrast to that method, DOT analysis was shown to accurately quantify simulated changes in chromophore concentrations. These results and the general principles suggest that DOT can accurately measure changes in [Hb] and [HbO], but NIRS cannot accurately determine even relative focal changes in these chromophore concentrations. For the standard NIRS analysis to become more accurate for focal changes, it must account for the position of the focal change relative to the source and detector as well as the wavelength dependent optical properties of the medium.
Neuron | 2001
Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; Joseph B. Mandeville; Koen Nelissen; Paul Van Hecke; Bruce R. Rosen; Roger B. H. Tootell; Guy A. Orban
To reduce the information gap between human neuroimaging and macaque physiology and anatomy, we mapped fMRI signals produced by moving and stationary stimuli (random dots or lines) in fixating monkeys. Functional sensitivity was increased by a factor of approximately 5 relative to the BOLD technique by injecting a contrast agent (monocrystalline iron oxide nanoparticle [MION]). Areas identified as motion sensitive included V2, V3, MT/V5, vMST, FST, VIP, and FEF (with moving dots), as well as V4, TE, LIP, and PIP (with random lines). These regions sensitive for moving dots are largely in agreement with monkey single unit data and (except for V3A) with human fMRI results. Moving lines activate some regions that have not been previously implicated in motion processing. Overall, the results clarify the relationship between the motion pathway and the dorsal stream in primates.
Neuron | 2003
Doris Y. Tsao; Wim Vanduffel; Yuka Sasaki; Denis Fize; Tamara A. Knutsen; Joseph B. Mandeville; Lawrence L. Wald; Anders M. Dale; Bruce R. Rosen; David C. Van Essen; Margaret S. Livingstone; Guy A. Orban; Roger B. H. Tootell
Stereopsis, the perception of depth from small differences between the images in the two eyes, provides a rich model for investigating the cortical construction of surfaces and space. Although disparity-tuned cells have been found in a large number of areas in macaque visual cortex, stereoscopic processing in these areas has never been systematically compared using the same stimuli and analysis methods. In order to examine the global architecture of stereoscopic processing in primate visual cortex, we studied fMRI activity in alert, fixating human and macaque subjects. In macaques, we found strongest activation to near/far compared to zero disparity in areas V3, V3A, and CIPS. In humans, we found strongest activation to the same stimuli in areas V3A, V7, the V4d topolog (V4d-topo), and a caudal parietal disparity region (CPDR). Thus, in both primate species a small cluster of areas at the parieto-occipital junction appears to be specialized for stereopsis.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2001
Rick M. Dijkhuizen; JingMei Ren; Joseph B. Mandeville; Ona Wu; Fatih M. Ozdag; Michael A. Moskowitz; Bruce R. Rosen; Seth P. Finklestein
Functional recovery after stroke has been associated with brain plasticity; however, the exact relationship is unknown. We performed behavioral tests, functional MRI, and histology in a rat stroke model to assess the correlation between temporal changes in sensorimotor function, brain activation patterns, cerebral ischemic damage, and cerebrovascular reactivity. Unilateral stroke induced a large ipsilateral infarct and acute dysfunction of the contralateral forelimb, which significantly recovered at later stages. Forelimb impairment was accompanied by loss of stimulus-induced activation in the ipsilesional sensorimotor cortex; however, local tissue and perfusion were only moderately affected and cerebrovascular reactivity was preserved in this area. At 3 days after stroke, extensive activation-induced responses were detected in the contralesional hemisphere. After 14 days, we found reduced involvement of the contralesional hemisphere, and significant responses in the infarction periphery. Our data suggest that limb dysfunction is related to loss of brain activation in the ipsilesional sensorimotor cortex and that restoration of function is associated with biphasic recruitment of peri- and contralesional functional fields in the brain.
Magnetic Resonance in Medicine | 1999
Joseph B. Mandeville; John J. A. Marota; Cenk Ayata; Michael A. Moskowitz; Robert M. Weisskoff; Bruce R. Rosen
This study reports the first measurement of the relative cerebral metabolic rate of oxygen utilization (rCMRO2) during functional brain activation with sufficient temporal resolution to address the dynamics of blood oxygen level‐dependent (BOLD) MRI signal. During rat forepaw stimulation, rCMRO2 was determined in somatosensory cortex at 3‐sec intervals, using a model of BOLD signal and measurements of the change in BOLD transverse relaxation rate, the resting state BOLD transverse relaxation rate, relative cerebral blood flow (rCBF), and relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV). Average percentage changes from 10 to 30 sec after onset of forepaw stimulation for rCBF, rCBV, rCMRO2, and BOLD relaxation rate were 62 ± 16, 17 ± 2, 19 ± 17, and −26 ± 12, respectively. A poststimulus undershoot in BOLD signal was quantitatively attributed to the temporal mismatch between changes in blood flow and volume, and not to the role of oxygen metabolism. Magn Reson Med 42:944–951, 1999.
NeuroImage | 2002
Francisca P. Leite; Doris Y. Tsao; Wim Vanduffel; Denis Fize; Yuka Sasaki; Lawrence L. Wald; Anders M. Dale; Kenneth K. Kwong; Guy A. Orban; Bruce R. Rosen; Roger B. H. Tootell; Joseph B. Mandeville
Iron oxide contrast agents have been employed extensively in anesthetized rodents to enhance fMRI sensitivity and to study the physiology of cerebral blood volume (CBV) in relation to blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signal following neuronal activation. This study quantified the advantages of exogenous agent for repeated neuroimaging in awake, nonhuman primates using a clinical 3 Tesla scanner. A monocrystalline iron oxide nanoparticle (MION) solution was injected at iron doses of 8 to 10 mg/kg in two macaque monkeys. Adverse behavioral effects due to contrast agent were not observed in either monkey using cumulative doses in excess of 60 mg/kg. Relative to BOLD imaging at 3 Tesla, MION increased functional sensitivity by an average factor of 3 across the brain for a stimulus of long duration. Rapid stimulus presentation attenuated MION signal changes more than BOLD signal changes, due to the slower time constant of the blood volume response relative to BOLD signal. Overall, the contrast agent produced a dramatic improvement in functional brain imaging results in the awake, behaving primate at this field strength. (c) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010
Peifang Tian; Ivan C. Teng; Larry D. May; Ronald Kurz; Kun Lu; Miriam Scadeng; Elizabeth M. C. Hillman; Alex de Crespigny; Helen D’Arceuil; Joseph B. Mandeville; John J. A. Marota; Bruce R. Rosen; Thomas T. Liu; David A. Boas; Richard B. Buxton; Anders M. Dale; Anna Devor
Changes in neuronal activity are accompanied by the release of vasoactive mediators that cause microscopic dilation and constriction of the cerebral microvasculature and are manifested in macroscopic blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) functional MRI (fMRI) signals. We used two-photon microscopy to measure the diameters of single arterioles and capillaries at different depths within the rat primary somatosensory cortex. These measurements were compared with cortical depth-resolved fMRI signal changes. Our microscopic results demonstrate a spatial gradient of dilation onset and peak times consistent with “upstream” propagation of vasodilation toward the cortical surface along the diving arterioles and “downstream” propagation into local capillary beds. The observed BOLD response exhibited the fastest onset in deep layers, and the “initial dip” was most pronounced in layer I. The present results indicate that both the onset of the BOLD response and the initial dip depend on cortical depth and can be explained, at least in part, by the spatial gradient of delays in microvascular dilation, the fastest response being in the deep layers and the most delayed response in the capillary bed of layer I.
NeuroImage | 2000
John J. A. Marota; Joseph B. Mandeville; Robert M. Weisskoff; Michael A. Moskowitz; Bruce R. Rosen; Barry E. Kosofsky
We applied a sensitive new functional magnetic resonance imaging technique to identify the pattern and determinants of cocaine-induced brain activation in drug-naive rats. At doses greater than 0.1 mg/kg iv, cocaine produced robust activation throughout cortex with the largest magnitude increase in frontal neocortex. Additionally, we detected selective activation within dopamine-innervated subcortical regions including dorsomedial and ventrolateral striatum, nucleus accumbens region, and dorsal thalamus. Although dose response was similar among activated regions, temporal response differentiated regions along distinct anatomical boundaries with basal ganglia and limbic cortical structures, reaching maximum activation later than frontal neocortex. Pharmacological specificity was demonstrated by blocking cocaine-induced activation with SCH-23390, a selective D1 antagonist. Our data demonstrate the utility of fMRI to identify spatiotemporal patterns of cocaine-induced brain activation and implicate D1 dopaminergic mechanisms in acute cocaine action.