About this Research Topic
However, most neuroimaging studies on small animals have been conducted under anesthesia. Despite the significant role that anesthesia plays in neuroimaging studies to avoid the effects of motion and physiological stress during functional imaging, it has become increasingly clear that anesthesia differentially affects brain metabolism, neuronal activity, and neurovascular coupling. This limits the translation to humans and affects reproducibility. In addition, the vast majority of studies in cognitive neurosciences require awake conditions to unravel neural mechanisms underlying different behaviors. Similarly in studies on the effect of neurological/psychiatric drugs, anesthesia might bias the outcome. Given that technical developments have made it possible to immobilize animals while investigating brain metabolism, neurovascular coupling, and brain circuitry in awake, behaving conditions, the time has come to move forward with awake small animal imaging. However, several awake functional imaging approaches are still facing several hurdles such as (i) smart restrained behavioral setups; (ii) stress associated with (head) fixation; (iii) body and head movements during behavioral tasks and (iv) characterization of hemodynamic response function in different animals to reliably model brain signals under awake and anesthetized conditions, just to mention a few.
This Research Topic calls for papers focusing on awake whole-brain functional imaging techniques such as fMRI, MEMRI, PET, SPECT, optical imaging, fUS, and Optoacoustics in small animals. The small animal models considered in the current research topic are, besides the traditional rodents (rat and mouse), also avian models (songbirds, pigeons, corvids, parrots), cats, marmosets, rabbits, and ferrets. We are seeking Review-, Opinion- and Methodological papers addressing the current challenges in awake and behaving small animal neuroimaging studies and Original Research Articles on the application of the established protocols in awake animals to address a variety of scientific questions. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to:
(1) Stress associated with immobilization and habituation protocols
(2) Behavioral training protocols
(3) Imaging protocols
(4) Resting-state networks and their dynamics under awake or anesthetized conditions
(5) Data processing of awake functional neuroimaging data to correct motion artifacts
(6) Sensory evoked responses in awake animals
(7) Task-based functional imaging protocols and data
(8) Neurovascular coupling studies using different functional neuroimaging readouts
(9) Effect of anesthesia on different neuroimaging readouts
(10) Characterizing awake hemodynamic response functions
(11) Effect of anesthesia on hemodynamic responses
(12) Monitoring wakefulness/attention networks during imaging
Keywords: fMRI, MEMRI, PET, SPECT, Functional Ultrasound, Optoacoustics, Awake, Anesthetized, Resting-state, Connectivity, Systems Neuroscience
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