HISTORY OF FUNCTIONAL MRI

In 1890 Roy and Sherrington's paper 'On the regulation of blood supply of the brain' suggested that neural activity was accompanied by a regional increase in cerebral blood flow.  Until 1990 there was no way of non-invasively measuring the flow of blood in cortical areas.   Ogawa and Lee at the AT and T Bell Laboratories working on rodents discovered that the oxygenation level of blood acts as a contrast agent in MR images.   They demonstrated that signals received from vessels were altered by drug-induced changes in blood flow from the brain.   It was suggested that this is a consequence of changing the content of deoxyhemoglobin in the blood.