Complementary BOLD- and ADC-fMRI explore the role of lateral superior colliculus in flicker fusion frequency

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Abstract

The transition from static to dynamic vision is encoded in the superior colliculus, as recently shown using blood-oxygen-level-dependent functional MRI (BOLD-fMRI) of the rat brain. Visual stimulation at higher frequency than the flicker fusion frequency threshold leads to continuity illusion and is associated with negative BOLD response in the visual cortex, triggered by the superior colliculus. In this paper, we explored this mechanism using fMRI of the rat brain with visual stimulation at low (1Hz) and high (25Hz) frequency. We compared responses between different brain regions (the dorsolateral geniculate nucleus of the thalamus, the medial and lateral parts of the superior colliculus, and the visual cortex), sexes, and field strengths (9.4T and 14T, with varying contributions from large vessels). Results confirmed distinct neural responses to low and high frequency stimulation and highlighted the role of the lateral part of the superior colliculus in the transition from static to dynamic vision. Finally, we evaluated the ability of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC)-fMRI to detect response to visual stimulation without vascular contribution. We found significant ADC-fMRI response in the medial and lateral parts of the superior colliculus but also in the corpus callosum. Our results highlight the ADC-fMRI high spatial specificity and high sensitivity to white matter.

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