J Korean Soc Magn Reson Med.  2005 Jun;9(1):24-29.

f-MRI with Three-Dimensional Visual Stimulation

Affiliations
  • 1VIA-Multimedia Center, Kwangwoon University, Korea. cbahn@daisy.kw.ac.kr
  • 2ISOL Technology Co., Korea.

Abstract

PURPOSE
Instead of conventional two-dimensional (2-D) visual stimuli, three-dimensional (3-D) visual stimuli with stereoscopic vision were employed for the study of functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (f-MRI). In this paper f-MRI with 3-D visual stimuli is investigated in comparison with f-MRI with 2-D visual stimuli. MATERIALS AND METHODS: The anaglyph which generates stereoscopic vision by viewing color coded images with red-blue glasses is used for 3-D visual stimuli. Two-dimensional visual stimuli are also used for comparison. For healthy volunteers, f-MRI experiments were performed with 2-D and 3-D visual stimuli at 3.0 Tesla MRI system. RESULTS: Occipital lobes were activated by the 3-D visual stimuli similarly as in the f-MRI with the conventional 2-D visual stimuli. The activated regions by the 3-D visual stimuli were, however, larger than those by the 2-D visual stimuli by 18%. CONCLUSION: Stereoscopic vision is the basis of the three-dimensional human perception. In this paper 3-D visual stimuli were applied using the anaglyph. Functional MRI was performed with 2-D and 3-D visual stimuli at 3.0 Tesla whole body MRI system. The occipital lobes activated by the 3-D visual stimuli appeared larger than those by the 2-D visual stimuli by about 18%. This is due to the more complex character of the 3-D human vision compared to 2-D vision. The f-MRI with 3-D visual stimuli may be useful in various fields using 3-D human vision such as virtual reality, 3-D display, and 3-D multimedia contents.

Keyword

Three-dimensional vision; Three-dimensional visual stimuli; Anaglyph; Stereoscopic vision; Functional MRI (f-MRI)

MeSH Terms

Depth Perception
Eyeglasses
Glass
Healthy Volunteers
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Multimedia
Occipital Lobe
Photic Stimulation*
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