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You are here: / Research / Introduction to fMRI
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Introduction to fMRI

Hannah Devlin describes how fMRI works and how it is used to discover how the brain works. With additional contributions by Irene Tracey, Heidi Johansen-Berg and Stuart Clare.

  • e enquiries@fmrib.ox.ac.uk
Introduction to fMRI
fMRI of the brain listening to sounds (blue) and seeing pictures (orange)

Functional magnetic resonance imaging, or FMRI, is a technique for measuring brain activity. It works by detecting the changes in blood oxygenation and flow that occur in response to neural activity – when a brain area is more active it consumes more oxygen and to meet this increased demand blood flow increases to the active area. FMRI can be used to produce activation maps showing which parts of the brain are involved in a particular mental process.


What is fMRI?

  • History of fMRI The physiologists who realised that blood flow could reveal brain activity
  • What does MRI measure? How a powerful magnet can be used to produce pictures of the brain.
  • What does fMRI measure? What makes MRI sensitive to brain activity?
  • Activation maps What the coloured blobs on fMRI scans represent.

How is fMRI used?

  • Who works in an fMRI laboratory ? The range of people who come together to make fMRI work.
  • Common criticisms of FMRI A critical look at what fMRI can tell us.
  • Clinical and commercial use How fMRI is being used now, and may be used in the future.
  • Other brain imaging techniques fMRI complements a number of other ways of looking at the brain.

Find Out More

  • FMRI: An introduction to methods A textbook edited by FMRIB Researchers.
  • A Brief Introduction to fMRI physiology More detail on how brain activity gives rise to signal change on MRI scans.

Related research themes

  • Education
    Education
Medical Sciences Division, University of Oxford
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