OHBM 2005 Program (Part A)

OHBM 2005 Program (Part A)

Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping CONTENTS Welcome Remarks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . General Information: . . . ...

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Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping

CONTENTS Welcome Remarks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . General Information: . . . . . . . . . . . . . Registration, Social Events, Speaker Ready Meeting Program Information . . . . . . . . Sunday, June 12 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . fMRI Course. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . MEG/EEG Course . . . . . . . . . . . . Opening Ceremony . . . . . . . . . . . Monday, June 13. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tuesday, June 14. . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wednesday, June 15 . . . . . . . . . . . . Thursday, June 16 . . . . . . . . . . . . . Schedule of Poster Presentations . . . . . . . List of Posters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Author Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exhibitor List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Scientific Posters and Exhibitor Floor Plans . MTCC Floor Plans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Council and Committees . . . . . . . . . . . Abstract Review Board. . . . . . . . . . . . Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

. . . . . . . . Room, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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NeuroImage Special Issue Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping

EDITORS Karl Zilles, MD, PhD Institute of Medicine Research Center Juelich D-52425 Juelich GERMANY

Jean-Baptiste Poline, PhD SHFJ/CEA Orsay 4 Place General Leclerc F-91401 Orsay FRANCE

Cheryl Grady, PhD Baycrest Centre for Geriatric Care Rotman Research Institute 3560 Bathurst Street Toronto, ON M6A 2E1 CANADA

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WELCOME REMARKS

Welcome to the Eleventh Annual Meeting of the Organization for Human Brain Mapping (OHBM) in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The venue of this meeting is the Metro Toronto Convention Centre, which will provide enriching academic experiences combined with easy access to the cultural attractions of Toronto. The OHBM has experienced explosive growth in the development of the field of functional neuroimaging. We hope that this meeting will provide the participants with a stimulating environment for an exchange of ideas on the workings of the human brain. This year’s scientific program reflects the burgeoning variety, steady increase, and strength of research into the functional organization of the human brain. This meeting retains the traditions of the OHBM by organizing single platform sessions throughout the whole event. In this way, the participants can attend all of the special lectures, symposia, and oral paper presentations. The poster sessions have been organized so that each poster will be displayed for two full days, and both the presenters and the interested researchers will have ample time to discuss the posters. The final poster reception on Thursday will include a wine and cheese party. This year’s program features the Talairach lecture by Pasko Rakic, Professor and Chair of the Neurobiology Department at Yale University. The Keynote speakers are internationally recognized leaders in their field and represent a wide diversity of disciplines. The Educational Program has been a great success at the past meetings, and we will be maintaining this custom by offering two oneday educational courses. The popular fMRI course along with the MEG/EEG course will be held on Sunday, June 12. Following these courses will be the opening ceremony and the Talairach lecture. Each day of the meeting will begin with three morning workshops from 8:00 – 9:20 am. Furthermore, be sure to visit the exhibits, which are located in Hall C of the Metro Toronto Convention Centre. The OHBM will host a complimentary Manufacturer’s Lunch where sponsors will make brief presentations of their latest products, services, and activities. Space will be limited to 300 attendees. Tickets can be obtained at the Registration Desk. A Board of Councilors elected by its membership governs the OHBM. If you are not a member of the OHBM, we encourage you to become a member of the organization and participate in its future growth. Please visit the Organization’s Web site at www.humanbrainmapping.org. We are glad that you have joined us in Toronto for what promises to be a uniquely exciting meeting in one of the most splendid cities in the world!

Cheryl Grady Chair, Local Organizing Committee Peter Fox Chair, OHBM Council Karl Zilles Chair, Scientific Program Committee

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GENERAL INFORMATION Conference Venue Metro Toronto Convention Centre 255 Front Street West (North Building) Toronto, ON M5V 2W6 Phone: (416) 585-8000 Fax: (416) 585-8198 All events will take place in the MTCC unless otherwise noted. Hotels: InterContinental Toronto Holiday Inn on King

416-597-1400 800-263-6364

Registration Hours Metro Toronto Convention Centre Level 200 Sunday, June 12: 7:00 – 18:00 Monday, June 13: 7:30 – 18:00 Tuesday, June 14: 7:30 – 18:00 Wednesday, June 15: 7:30 – 18:00 Thursday, June 16: 7:30 – 12:00 Exhibits Metro Toronto Convention Centre, Hall C Level 300 Hours: Monday, June 13: 11:00 – 13:30; 15:00 – 19:00* Tuesday, June 14: 11:00 – 13:30; 15:00 – 16:30 Wednesday, June 15: 11:00 – 13:30; 15:00 – 19:00* Thursday, June 16: 11:00 – 13:30

Join us for light hors d’oeuvres and entertainment. Dress is business casual. Event is complimentary, but a ticket is required. This event is sponsored in part by Siemens Medical Solutions. Club Night Wednesday, June 15, 21:00 Lucid Night Club 126 John Street Toronto, Ontario Spend an evening at a local Toronto club enjoying great music and dancing. The party is complimentary, but a ticket is required. This event is sponsored by Philips Medical Systems. Niagara Falls and Winery Tour Let the charm of the Niagara region mesmerize you. This full-day tour includes: Niagara Falls, Maid of the Mist boat tour of the Falls, lunch, and winery tour and tasting. Since the early 1820s, millions of visitors have been attracted to Niagara Falls. The Falls is awe-inspiring; even more so aboard the historical, world-famous Maid of the Mist. The tour will cruise right to the base of the American Falls where you will hear the thunder on the rocks and feel a cool mist on your faces. You will enjoy a buffet lunch overlooking the Falls at one of the area’s popular restaurants. En route back to Toronto, you will have the opportunity to enjoy a winery tour and tasting at one of the region’s renowned wineries. Price per person is US$100. Limited availability and reservations are on a first-come, first-serve basis. Tickets can be purchased at the Info T.O. desk on the street level of the North Building, Metro Toronto Convention Centre. You may also contact them at 416-868-0400.

*Special poster reception from 18:00 – 19:00

Town Hall Meeting Tuesday, June 14, 18:00 Constitution Hall, Level 100 Manufacturer’s Lunch Tuesday, June 14, 12:00 Constitution Hall, Room 107, Level 100 This lunch will feature brief presentations of the latest products, services, and activities offered by exhibitors at the HBM 2005 meeting. Lunch is complimentary, but you must have a ticket. Space is limited to 300 and will be granted on a first-come, first-serve basis. Tickets can be obtained at the Registration Desk. Social Programs All events require a ticket. Complimentary and prepaid tickets will be included in the attendee’s materials. Guest tickets may be purchased at Registration, Level 200. The price is $100 and includes tickets for all evening events. Opening Reception Sunday, June 12, 19:00 Metro Toronto Convention Centre, Level 100

Other Tours, Reservations and Attractions For information on other Toronto tours, attractions, restaurant reservations, and theatre tickets, visit the Info T.O. desk on the street level of the North Building, Metro Toronto Convention Centre or contact them at 416-868-0400. Speaker Ready Room/Internet Cafe´ Summit Room 204, Level 200 Hours: Monday, June 13 to Thursday, 16: 8:00 – 18:00 Friday, June 17: 8:00 – 17:00 Complimentary terminals and Internet connections will be available in the Internet Cafe´ in the Summit Room 204 Level 200 of the MTCC for all presenters and attendees. Wireless Internet will also be available outside Constitution Hall and the Summit Room. The network will support both 802.11a and 802.11b cards. A limited number of wireless network cards will be available on-site for rent or purchase. Anyone interested in using the network will need a laptop and a wireless network card. On-site support will be very limited. NEW! The Abstract Deadline for the 12th Annual Meeting; June 11 – 15, 2006 in Florence, Italy, is December 15, 2005. Submission site will open October 1, 2005.

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MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE fMRI COURSE

Sunday, June 12, 2005 Metro Toronto Convention Centre Reception Hall, Room 104, Level 100

There is an additional fee, and registration is required for this course. CME credit will be available for this activity only. This fMRI Course is designed for anyone who is beginning to use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to address basic or clinical neuroscientific research questions and who wishes to improve their understanding of the ‘‘state-of-the-art’’ in fMRI biophysics, data analysis, and experimental design. All members of the faculty are internationally leading fMRI scientists, with excellent reputations for clear teaching presentations. There will be opportunities to ask questions to the experts during the course. Having completed this activity, participants should be able to:

(i) List the physical principles of fMRI, the current knowledge of BOLD including its limitations, the basics of EPI data acquisition, its limitations and solutions, and the issues in subject interface devices.

(ii) Discuss localization issues and statistics basics including intrasubject and intersubject registration, how to design efficient experimental paradigms, the temporal and spatial and interpretation limits of fMRI, its future direction and classical and Bayesian inferences, and how to deal with the multiple comparison problem. (iii) Summarize the principles, applications, and limitations of functional connectivity with fMRI, multimodal connectivity, and causal models using fMRI and DTI, principles, recipe, examples and limitations of computational anatomy, and how to use non-conjoint and conjoint EEG and fMRI information. The morning sessions are designed to understanding the basis of fMRI, while the afternoon sessions are more advanced courses. At the breaks, participants are allowed to switch to the EEG/MEG course.

8:00 – 8:05 8:05 – 8:30 8:30 – 9:30 9:30 – 10:30 10:30 – 11:00 11:00 – 11:40 11:40 – 12:30 12:30 – 13:30 13:30 – 14:00 14:00 – 15:00 15:00 – 15:30 15:30 – 16:00 16:00 – 16:30 16:30 – 17:00 17:00 – 17:30

fMRI Course Schedule Introduction to the course Motivation Basis of fMRI Signal Change: Where, When, and Why Acquisition: Current Limitations (artifacts) and Sense Break Localization Issues and Statistics Basics Efficient Experimental Paradigms and Errors You Should Never Make Lunch break Beyond Spatial Temporal and Interpretation Limits of fMRI Statistics — Classical and Bayesian Inferences Break Functional Connectivity with fMRI Multimodal Connectivity and Causal Models Computational Anatomy — VBM and Alternatives Experimental Paradigms and Conjoint EEG – fMRI

Jean-Baptiste Poline Peter Fox Ravi Menon Larry Wald Jesper Andersson Rik Henson Peter Bandettini Tom Nichols Ed Bullmore Christian Buechel John Ashburner Andreas Kleinschmidt

CME CREDIT: This activity has been planned and implemented in accordance with the Essential Areas and Policies of the Accreditation Council for Continuing Medical Education through the joint sponsorship of the Minnesota Medical Association and The Organization for Human Brain Mapping. The Minnesota Medical Association is accredited by the ACCME to provide continuing medical education for physicians. The MMA designates this educational activity for a maximum of 7.25 category 1 credits toward the AMA Physician’s Recognition Award. Each physician should claim only those credits that he/she actually spent in the activity.

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MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE MEG/EEG COURSE

Sunday, June 12, 2005 Metro Toronto Convention Centre Room 206 B, D, F, Level 200

With the constant development of MEG and the arrival of EEG in the MR magnet, there is a need to review the specificity of functional brain mapping using electromagnetic neural fields. This course intends to offer a review of the basics of electromagnetic brain mapping together with an open window on recent developments in the technology and methods involved. This course is addressed to a multidisciplinary audience, from electrophysiologists to physicists, interested in the potentials of MEG/EEG as a brain mapping modality.

MEG/EEG Course Schedule 8:00 – 8:10

Introduction to the course

Sylvain Baillet & Riitta Salmelin

Part I: Non-invasive Measurement of Neural Currents 8:10 – 8:40 8:40 – 9:20 9:20 – 9:30 9:30 – 10:10 10:10 – 10:20

Electrophysiological Basis of MEG/EEG Signals What it Takes to Run an MEG/EEG Experiment Discussion From MEG/EEG Signals to Brain Activations: Theory Discussion

10:20 – 10:50

Break

Yosiho Okada Lauri Parkkonen Sylvain Baillet

Part II: MEG/EEG Brain Mapping in Practice 10:50 – 11:30 11:30 – 11:40 11:40 – 12:20 12:20 – 12:30

EEG in Cognitive Neuroscience Discussion MEG in Cognitive Neuroscience Discussion

12:30 – 13:30

Lunch Break

Don Tucker Riitta Salmelin

Part III: Tackling Complexity: Emerging Approaches in Modeling and Analysis 13:30 – 13:55 13:55 – 14:00 14:00 – 14:25 14:25 – 14:30 14:30 – 14:55 14:55 – 15:00

New Perspectives on Brain Rhythmic Activity Discussion Single-trial Event-Related Analysis Discussion Imaging Dynamic Networks: From Co-activation to Causality Discussion

15:00 – 15:30

Break

Ole Jensen Scott Makeig Peter A. Tass

Part IV: Imaging: Statistics, Multimodal Approaches, Specific Clinical Challenges 15:30 – 15:55 15:55 – 16:00 16:00 – 16:25 16:25 – 16:30 16:30 – 17:00

Statistical Inference for MEG – EEG Imaging Discussion Combining MEG/EEG and fMRI Maps Discussion MEG/EEG in Clinical Practice

Gareth Barnes

17:00 – 17:30

Take-home messages and general discussion moderated by Riitta Salmelin and Sylvain Baillet

G.L. Romani Kyousuke Kamada

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MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE Sunday, June 12, 2005 Metro Toronto Convention Centre Constitution Hall, Level 100

18:00 – 19:00

OPENING CEREMONY Presentation of Young Investigator Award Talairach Lecture: Pasko Rakic ‘‘Determinants of Cortical Size and Cytoarchitecture’’

19:00 – 20:00

OPENING RECEPTION Metro Toronto Convention Centre, Level 100 This event is sponsored in part by Siemens Medical Solutions

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MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE MORNING WORKSHOPS

Monday, June 13, 2005 8:00 – 9:20

Cutting Edge BOLD fMRI Chair: Peter Bandettini 7T and Large N Array Coils: Challenges and Opportunities Technical Requirements to Reap Full Benefits of High Field Strengths Novel Functional MRI Processing Techniques that Lend Themselves to Advantages of 7T

Room 107, Level 100

Mining the Complexity of Functional MRI Data Chair: Vince Calhoun ICA and FHigher_ Brain Processes Mapping Functional Changes in Schizophrenia and Intoxicated Driving When FMore is Better_: When Can We Trust Multivariate Exploratory fMRI Analyses? The Mechanisms and Benefits of Extensively Studying a Small Number of Subjects

Room 206 B, D, F, Level 200

Genetics and Brain Mapping Chair: Kate Watkins Functional Neuroimaging of Genetically Driven Variation in Brain Function: Toward a Biological Understanding of Individual Differences in Behavior Mapping Heritability and Molecular Genetic Associations with Cortical Features Using Probabilistic Brain Atlases: Methods and Applications to Schizophrenia Genetic Determinants of Brain Anatomy and Function; The Advantages and Pitfalls of Human Models

Lawrence Wald Pierre-Francois Van de Moortele Nikolaus Kriegeskorte

Scott Makeig Vince Calhoun Elisa Formisano Robert Savoy Room 205 B, D, Level 200 Ahmad Hariri Tyrone Cannon Declan Murphy

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM

Monday, June 13, 2005 Constitution Hall

9:30 – 11:00

LOC PRESIDENT’S SYMPOSIUM Chair: Cheryl Grady Beyond BOLD: Alternative Approaches to Studying Brain Function and Dysfunction Kathy Murphy — Development of the Visual Cortex: A Changing Cast of Plasticity Players Stefan Everling — Look Away: the Antisaccade Task as a Tool for Neuroscience Avi Chaudhuri — Integrative Approaches to the Study of Face Perception Shitij Kapur — Imaging Receptors from Bench to Bedside-Lessons Learned in the Study of Schizophrenia

11:00 – 12:00

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #1 – 764 and are followed by M-AM will be present. Neuroanatomy and Brain Mapping, Emotion and Motivation, Memory and Learning, Motor Behavior and Modeling and Analysis

12:00 – 13:30

Lunch on own

13:30 – 15:00

Symposium: Inhibitory Control in fMRI: Application of Basic Research to Psychopathology Chair: Rita Goldstein

Hall C, Level 300

Rita Goldstein — The Lateral Orbitofrontal Cortex and Inhibitory Control in Cocaine Addiction Hugh Garavan — Drug Abuse and Alterations in Inhibitory Control Marie Banich — Neural Mechanisms of Control as Revealed by the Stroop Task Cameron Carter — The Prefrontal Cortex in Cognitive Control 15:00 – 16:30

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #1 – 764 and are followed by M-PM will be present. Neuroanatomy and Brain Mapping, Emotion and Motivation, Memory and Learning, Motor Behavior and Modeling and Analysis

16:30 – 17:00

Keynote Lecture: Earl Miller ‘‘Neural Substrates of Categories, Concepts, and Cognitive Control’’

17:00 – 18:00

Oral Session: Neuroanatomy Chair: Katrin Amunts

17:00 – 17:10

Cortical Folding Hypotheses: What Can be Inferred From Shape? Thomas Huebsch, Max Planck Institute for Brain Science, Leipzig, Germany Receptorarchitectonic Evidence for a Hierarchical Organization of the Human Auditory Cortex Patricia Morosan, Forschungszentrum Juelich Institute for Medicine, Juelich, Germany Activity Changes in Retinotopic Visual Cortex Induced by Stimulating Human Frontal Eye Fields with TMS During fMRI Christian Ruff, Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, London, England 3D Cortical Thickness Reductions Mapped in HIV/AIDS; Correlate with Cognitive Impairment and Immune System Deterioration Paul Thompson, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA Spatial Relaxation Increases the Sensitivity of Random Effects Analyses: The Benefit of Inter-subject Parcellation Bertrand Thirion, CEA/SHFJ, Orsay, France

17:10 – 17:20

17:20 – 17:30

17:30 – 17:40

17:40 – 17:50

17:50 – 18:00

Audience Discussion

Hall C, Level 300

Poster #70 M-PM Poster #166 M-PM

Poster #116 T-PM

Poster #21 M-AM

Poster #542 M-PM

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM CONTINUED

18:00 – 19:00

Monday, June 13, 2005

Poster Reception Authors whose posters are numbered #1 – 764 followed by M-AM, M-PM, T-AM, and T-PM will be present. Neuroanatomy and Brain Mapping, Emotion and Motivation, Memory and Learning, Motor Behavior and Modeling and Analysis

Hall C, Level 300

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MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE MORNING WORKSHOPS

Tuesday, June 14, 2005 8:00 – 9:20

Emerging Magnetic Resonance Techniques for Neuroscience Chair: Fahmeed Hyder Introduction Dynamic Imaging of Blood Flow, Volume, and Oxygen Metabolism Towards Integrating In Vivo ‘‘Cytoarchitectonics’’ with Functional Imaging Baseline Effects in Human fMRI Studies Energetics of Cortical Glutamatergic and GABAergic Activity In Vivo Mapping Brain Function in Neurological and Psychiatric Disorders Chair: David Eidelberg Network Mapping in Parkinson’s Disease: Studies of Disease Progression and Therapy Network Mapping in Alzheimer’s Disease: Genetics and Natural History Multivariate Analysis: Applications to the Study of Hereditary Movement Disorders Network Mapping in the Treatment of Affective Disorders Intersubject Heterogeneity in fMRI RFX Analyses Chair: Thomas Nichols Massively Univariate Model Diagnosis for Group fMRI Data Are Subjects from a Homogeneous Population? Problems and Some Solutions for Intersubject Variability Multivariate Exploration of Group fMRI Data with Tensor ICA

Room 107, Level 100 Fahmeed Hyder Bruce Pike Paul Matthews Todd Constable Kevin Behar Room 206 B, D, F, Level 200 David Eidelberg James Moeller Maron Carbon-Correll Helen Mayberg Room 205 B, D, Level 200 Thomas Nichols Jean-Baptiste Poline Christian Beckmann

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM

Tuesday, June 14, 2005 Constitution Hall

9:30 – 10:00

Keynote Lecture: Daniel Weinberger ‘‘Imaging Phenotypes and Genetic Mechanisms of Psychiatric Illness’’

10:00 – 11:00

Oral Session: Emotion and Memory Chair: Lee Ryan

10:00 – 10:10

Working Memory for Emotional Faces Recruits Limbic and Frontoparietal Networks Christian Roeder, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands Posterior Mesiofrontal Cortex and When to Say When Daniel Hommer, NIH/NIAAA, Bethesda, MD Facial Communication Synchronizes Local Brain Activity: An Inter-subject Correlational fMRI Study Ethofer Thomas, Hertie-Institut for Clinical Brain Research, Tuebingen, Germany Age-related Changes in Face and Facial Emotion Perception Over Six Decades: Evidence from ERPs and fMRI Leanne Williams, The Brain Dynamics Centre, Westmead Hospital and University of Sydney Cortical Plasticity in the Representation of Object Categories Marieke van der Linden, F.C. Donders Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

10:10 – 10:20 10:20 – 10:30

10:30 – 10:40

10:40 – 10:50

10:50 – 11:00

Audience Discussion

11:00 – 12:00

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #1 – 764 and are followed by T-AM will be present. Neuroanatomy and Brain Mapping, Emotion and Motivation, Memory and Learning, Motor Behavior and Modeling and Analysis

12:00 – 13:30

Manufacturer’s Lunch (Tickets Required) Constitution Hall, Room 107, Level 100 or Lunch on your own

13:30 – 15:00

Symposium: Genesis of Pain Perception in the Human Brain Co-Chairs: Andrew Chen and Rolf-Detlef Treede

Poster #207 T-AM Poster #208 T-PM Poster #209 M-AM

Poster #965 W-AM

Poster #326 M-PM

Hall C, Level 300

Andrew Chen — The Issues of Pain Genesis in the Human Brain Rolf-Detlef Treede — Anatomy and Physiology of the Primary Somatosensory Cortex (SI) in Processing of Nociceptive Input Ryusuke Kakigi — The Role of SII: MEG Source Localization and Empirical Findings Luis Garcia-Larrea — Sensory, Cognitive and Emotional Pain Processing: Learning from Healthy Subjects and from Patients in Pain 15:00 – 16:30

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #1 – 764 and are followed by T-PM will be present. Neuroanatomy and Brain Mapping, Emotion and Motivation, Memory and Learning, Motor Behavior and Modeling and Analysis

16:30 – 17:00

Keynote Lecture: Gereon Fink ‘‘Neuropsychological Deficits: From Understanding the Pathophysiology to Developing Novel Treatment Strategies’’

17:00 – 18:00

Oral Session: Motor Behavior Chair: Gottfried Schlaug

17:00 – 17:10

The Role of the Healthy Hemisphere for Recovery After Stroke: Interference of Sequential Finger Movements by fMRI Navigated TMS Martin Lotze, University of Tuebingen, Tuebingen, Germany Frontal Motor Reorganization in Asymptomatic Carriers of a Single Mutant Parkin Allele: A Human Model for Presymptomatic Parkinsonism Hartwig Siebner, Christian Albrechts University,Kiel, Germany Distributed Population Codes in the Primary Motor Cortex of Violinists Steven Small, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

17:10 – 17:20

17:20 – 17:30

Hall C, Level 300

Poster #422 M-PM

Poster #420 T-PM

Poster #444 T-PM

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM CONTINUED

17:30 – 17:40

Tuesday, June 14, 2005

17:40 – 17:50

Study of Motor Learning by Functional MRI and PET Shalini Narayana, UTHSCSA, San Antonio, TX A Single-Dose Of Methylphenidate Interacts With The Cerebral Reorganization Network After A Subcortical Stroke And Improves Motor Performances Isabelle Loubinoux, INSERM, Toulouse, France

17:50 – 18:00

Audience Discussion

18:00 – 18:30

Town Hall Meeting

Poster #442 M-PM Poster #421 M-PM

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MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE MORNING WORKSHOPS

Wednesday, June 15, 2005 8:00 – 9:20

The HBM Functional Imaging Analysis Contest Room 107, Level 100 Chair: HBM-FIAC, Jean-Baptiste Poline The HBM Functional Imaging Analysis Contest will present the results of the analysis of a fMRI dataset of a language study analyzed by many different techniques and various laboratories around the world. A panel of method experts and language experts in an interactive way will discuss these results. Novel methods or techniques showing improvements in the analyses and helping relevant cognitive interpretations will be presented. The method panel includes K. Friston, T. Nichols, S. Smith, Bob Cox, K. Worsley, S. Strother, and R. Goebel. The language panel includes G. Dehaene, S. Bookheimer, C. Price, R. Poldrack, N. Golestani, P. Belin, and others. Quantitative Relationships Between BOLD Signals and Perceptual Decisions Chair: Maurizio Corbetta Traveling Waves of Activity in Visual Cortex During Binocular Rivalry Predicting Human Decisions From Preparatory BOLD-fMRI Signals Quantitative fMRI of Working Memory and Perceptual Decision Making Functional Neuroimaging of Sleep: Why, When and How? Chair: Phillippe Peigneux What Can Neuroimaging Findings Tell Us About Sleep Disorders? Neuroimaging of Sleep Debt and Its Effect on Cerebral Responses to Cognitive Performance Local Increase in Slow-Wave Activity After a Learning Talk Functional Brain Imaging of Memory Processing Through the Sleep – Wake Cycle

Room 206 B, D, F, Level 200 David Heeger Giovanni d’Avossa Luiz Pessoa Room 205 B, D, Level 200 Eric Nofzinger Sean Drummond Reto Huber Phillippe Peigneux

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SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM

Wednesday, June 15, 2005 Constitution Hall

9:30 – 10:00

Keynote Lecture: Nancy Kanwisher ‘‘Functional Specificity in the Cortex: Selectivity, Origins, and Generality’’

10:00 – 11:00

Oral Session: Perception Chair: Krish Sathian

10:00 – 10:10

An MEG Study of Perceptual Decision Making Anthony Boemio, NIH, Bethesda, MD Early and Late Correlates of Implied Motion Perception in Human Motion Area V5/MT Ian Fawcett, Wellcome Trust Laboratory For MEG Studies, Birmingham, UK The Bi-partite Organization of the Human Caudal Brain Yulia Golland, Tel Aviv, Israel Seeing and Feeling Limb Movements in the Human Left Cerebellum Nobuhiro Hagura, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan Auditory – visual Multisensory Interactions Modulate the Dynamics of BOLD Responses in Primary Cortices Roberto Martuzzi, Centra Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausuanne

10:10 – 10:20

10:20 – 10:30 10:30 – 10:40 10:40 – 10:50

10:50 – 11:00

Audience Discussion

11:00 – 12:00

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #765 – 1584 and are followed by W-AM will be present. Imaging Techniques, Development and Aging, Language, Cognition and Attention, Sensation and Perception, Physiology, Metabolism and Neurotransmission

12:00 – 13:30

Lunch on own

13:30 – 15:00

Symposium: Cortical Fingerprinting: What Anatomy Can Tell Us About Functional Architecture Co-Chairs: Heidi Johansen-Berg and Bruce Fischl

Poster #1471 TH-AM Poster #1467 TH-AM

Poster #1383 TH-AM Poster #1380 TH-PM Poster #1382 W-PM

Hall C, Level 300

Heidi Johansen-Berg and Tim Behrens — Connectivity-based Grey Matter Parcellation Bruce Fischl — Inferring In-Vivo Cytoarchitecture From Ex-Vivo MRI Alan Evans and Jason Lerch — Cortical Thickness Mapping Karl Zilles — Multireceptor Parcellation of the Human Cortex 15:00 – 16:30

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #765 – 1584 and are followed by W-PM will be present. Imaging Techniques, Development and Aging, Language, Cognition and Attention, Sensation and Perception, Physiology, Metabolism and Neurotransmission

16:30 – 17:00

Keynote Lecture: Patrick Haggard ‘‘Body Perception’’

17:00 – 18:00

Oral Session: Imaging and Modeling Chair: Sean Marrett

17:00 – 17:10

Cortical Connectivity in a Continuous Reading Task Jan Kujala, Low Temperature Laboratory, Espoo, Finland Real-Time Classification of Brain States for Adaptive fMRI Experiments Stephen LaConte, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia Simultaneous EEG and fMRI for Event Related Studies Robin Goldman, Columbia University, New York, NY Functional Space Representation of Human Cognitive Networks Roberto Toro, Universite Pierre et Marie, Paris, France

17:10 – 17:20 17:20 – 17:30 17:30 – 17:40

Hall C, Level 300

Poster #875 TH-AM Poster #786 W-PM Poster #885 W-AM Poster #712 M-AM

S16

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM CONTINUED

Wednesday, June 15, 2005

17:40 – 17:50

How Well Do Group Structural Equation Models Account for Individual Data? Application to Stroke Recovery Ana Solodkin, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL

17:50 – 18:00

Audience Discussion

18:00 – 19:00

Poster Reception Authors whose posters are numbered #765 – 1584 followed by W-AM, W-PM, TH-AM, and TH-PM will be present. Imaging Techniques, Development and Aging, Language, Cognition and Attention, Sensation and Perception, Physiology, Metabolism and Neurotransmission

21:00

Club Night at Lucid (Tickets Required) This event is sponsored by Philips Medical Systems

Poster #510 M-PM

Hall C, Level 300

S17

MEETING PROGRAM SCHEDULE MORNING WORKSHOPS

Thursday, June 16, 2005 8:00 – 9:20

Spontaneous Low-Frequency BOLD Fluctuations and Functional Connectivity Chair: Mark J. Lowe Evidence for a Connectivity Contrast Mechanism Data Analysis: Network Connectivity Assessment Physiologic Noise, Aliasing Artifacts, and Correction Models Resting State Correlations and the Default Mode Hypothesis Wavelets and Brain Mapping Chairs: Ed Bullmore and Mick Brammer Multidimensional Representation of Neuroimaging Data Using Wavelets and Fractals WSPM: A New Approach for Wavelet-Based Statistical Analysis of fMRI Data The Wavelet Approach to Dissociation Inference in Human Brain Mapping Multiscale Neural Dynamics: Mapping Neural Synchronization and Complexity in the Wavelet Domain Voxel-wise Coordinate Based Meta Analyses Chair: Peter Fox Activation Likelihood Estimation Frontal Eye Fields: Moving and Perceiving Meta-Analysis of Picture Naming: Effects of Baseline BrainMap: Performance Evaluation vis-a`-vis Meta-Analysis Invited Discussants: Jane Neumann, Jack Lancaster and Karl Friston

Room 107, Level 100 Mark J. Lowe Bharat Biswal Torben E. Lund Michael Greicius Room 206 B, D, F, Level 200 Ivo Dinov Dimitri van de Ville Federico Turkheimer Michael Breakspear Room 205 B, D, Level 200 Peter Turkeltaub Thomas Paus Cathy Price Peter Fox

S18

SCIENTIFIC PROGRAM

Thursday, June 16, 2005 Constitution Hall

9:30 – 11:00

Symposium: New Advances in Pediatric Neuroimaging Co-Chairs: Larry Stanford and Susan Bookheimer BJ Casey — Functional MRI in Normal Development Robert C. Mckinstry, III — Probing Normal and Perturbed Brain Development with Diffusion Tensor Imaging Elizabeth Sowell — Structural Brain Development from Childhood through Adolescence Michelle de Haan — Using Event-Related Potentials to Track the Development of Face Processing from Infancy to Adulthood

11:00 – 12:00

Poster Session/Coffee Break Authors whose posters are numbered #765 – 1584 are followed by TH-AM will be present. Imaging Techniques, Development and Aging, Language, Cognition and Attention, Sensation and Perception, Physiology, Metabolism and Neurotransmission

12:00 – 13:00

Lunch on own

13:00 – 13:30

Keynote Lecture: Michael Posner ‘‘Development of Attentional Networks: Synthesizing Imaging, Genetic and Training Data’’

13:30 – 14:30

Oral Session: Cognition and Language Chair: Michael Chee

13:30 – 13:40

Antisaccade Errors are Associated with Failure to Deactivate the FDefault Mode_ Network Frida Polli, Suffolk Univeristy, Charlestown, MA, USA Imaging Functional Lesions Induced by TMS Using BOLD fMRI Juergen Baudewig, Max-Planck Institute, Goettingen, Germany ERP Characterization of the Interplay of Orthographic and Semantic Priming During Word Recognition Clara Martin, INSERM U455, Toulouse, France Time Course of Top – down and Bottom – up Influences on Syllable Processing in the Auditory Cortex Milene Bonte, University of Maastricht, Maastricht, The Netherlands From the Knight to the Right: An Event-related fMRI Study of Schizophrenic Thinking Gina Kuperberg, Mass General Hospital, Cambridge, MA

13:40 – 13:50 13:50 – 14:00

14:00 – 14:10

14:10 – 14:20

14:20 – 14:30

Audience Discussion

14:30 – 15:30

Closing Comments: Marcus Raichle, Past Chair of OHBM Reflections on the State of Brain Mapping, 2005

15:30 – 16:30

POSTER RECEPTION — Wine and Cheese Party Authors whose posters are numbered #765 – 1584 are followed by TH-PM will be present. Imaging Techniques, Development and Aging, Language, Cognition and Attention, Sensation and Perception, Physiology, Metabolism and Neurotransmission

Hall C, Level 300

Poster #1142 W-PM Poster #1143 TH-AM Poster #1117 W-AM

Poster #1105 W-AM

Poster #989 W-AM

Hall C, Level 300

S19

SCHEDULE OF POSTER PRESENTATIONS Posters will be displayed by topic areas. Monday, June 13 and Tuesday, June 14, 2005 Neuroanantomy and Brain Mapping (#1 – 178) Emotion & Motivation (#179 – 300) Memory & Learning (#301 – 419) Motor Behavior (#420 – 509) Modeling & Analysis (#510 – 764) Wednesday, June 15 and Thursday, June 16, 2005 Imaging Techniques (#765 – 910) Development & Aging (#911 – 988) Language (#989 – 1135) Cognition & Attention (#1136 – 1357) Sensation & Perception (#1358 – 1516) Physiology, Metabolism and Neurotransmission (#1517 – 1584)

Authors will be present according to the following poster number legend: Numbers refer to the sequence

245 M-PM Day of week author is present

Poster Session author is present

First Letter = Day author is present M Monday, June 13 T Tuesday, June 14 W Wednesday, June 15 TH Thursday, June 16

Next Two Letters = Poster Session author present AM Morning PM Afternoon

Poster Receptions: Monday, June 13, 18:00 – 19:00 All authors with a Monday or Tuesday poster will be present Wednesday, June 15, 18:00 – 19:00 All authors with a Wednesday or Thursday poster will be present