About this Research Topic
Finally, this knowledge will serve to generate new models of brain organization and function. Hence, neuroscience imaging emerges nowadays as a multidisciplinary field with more potential than ever to unravel the secrets of the brain. Thus, this is a perfect moment to review the evolution of this field, renew old methods, and implement new techniques that allow us to capture the essence of the mind.
The aim of this Research Topic is to discuss the advantages and pitfalls of old and new imaging methods, and associated analytical tools, that are used to explore the structure and function of the brain from the molecular/cellular level, to the whole brain connectome level, in both pre-clinical and clinical settings.
All manuscripts must contain a critical analysis of addressed imaging methodology or analysis tools, highlighting key contributions and achievements in Neuroscience and indicate the author’s perspective for future developments.
Original Research, review papers, methods, perspective, conceptual analysis, brief research report, general commentary, opinion, and technology and Code manuscripts focused on the following topics are welcome:
• Renewed and innovative imaging-related molecular and cellular imaging techniques in neuroscience (fluorescence microscopy, live-imaging, super-resolution, light sheet imaging, and others);
• Genetic engineering for brain imaging, including new methods for connectomics;
• Pre-clinical and clinical brain imaging; including non-human and human brain structural and functional analysis;
• Image analysis tools (stereology, Sholl analysis, segmentation, deconvolution, machine-learning based acquisition or analysis, etc.).
Keywords: Human brain imaging, connectome imaging, image analysis, live imaging, super-resolution, two-photon microscopy
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.