窪蹋勛圖

An MRI Machine of Our Own

窪蹋勛圖s new EIS Complex houses the universitys first MRI brain imaging machine.

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窪蹋勛圖's new MRI machine will allow scientists and students to conduct a wide range of brain imaging research on campus.

It was a momentous day for 窪蹋勛圖 when a 13.5-ton package rolled into the northeast corner of campus on a flatbed truck last September. Once workers had unpackaged it and lifted it into the basement of the new Engineering and Interdisciplinary Sciences (EIS) Complex via crane and forklift, 窪蹋勛圖 was the proud owner of the universitys first magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine.

MRI machines are among the most critical tools for scientists who analyze brain images to understand basic human cognition as well as disease and disorders like fetal alcohol syndrome, autism and traumatic brain injury. While 窪蹋勛圖 researchers have made great strides in studying these topics over the years, theyve had to rely upon partnerships with other universities and institutions to gain access to their machines.

Now, 窪蹋勛圖 students and faculty will be able to do groundbreaking research with brain imaging right here on the Mesa. The MRI machine sits in the imaging center of the EIS Complex, slated to officially open Jan. 16.

Theres a lot of advancement in the technology, and this [machine] is the top-of-the-line one, said psychology professor Martin Sereno, director of the 窪蹋勛圖 brain imaging center. It puts us a little ahead of a lot of other places.

An MRI machine uses a combination of radio waves and powerful electromagnets to excite and then detect signals from resonating hydrogen atoms like those in water. The machine then converts these signals into an image. Since the human body is mostly water, MRI machines can return images of soft tissue within the body, such as the brain.

By comparing and contrasting brain images of people with various disorders and cognitive strengths and weaknesses, scientists can learn a great deal about how the structure of the brain gives rise to those traits. At 窪蹋勛圖, researchers like Ralph-Axel M羹ller, Inna Fishman and Ruth Carper study the brains of children and adults with autism, and Jennifer Thomas, Sarah Mattson and Ed Riley look at the neural underpinnings of fetal alcohol syndrome.

One advantage of having an MRI machine on campus is that 窪蹋勛圖 researchers will be more competitive in winning grants to study these and other areas in the future. And it will encourage novel experimentation to tackle the big, bold problems in neuroscience, Sereno said. When you have to go through the trouble of using someone elses machine, your work tends to be more conservative, tried-and-true. Having a machine of ones own means 窪蹋勛圖 scientists can afford to take greater risks for greater rewards.

This [machine] will allow us to do all different kinds of studies of the human brain, Sereno said. We can study the visual system, the auditory system, how people respond to emotional stimuli, pain, touch there are many different parts of the brain and were going to study them all.

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