Whisker pad stimulation with different frequencies reveals non-uniform modulation of functional MRI signal across sensory systems in awake rats
Jaakko Paasonen, Juha S Valjakka, Raimo A Salo, Ekaterina Paasonen, Heikki Tanila, Shalom Michaeli, Silvia Mangia, Olli Gröhn

TL;DR
Stimulating rat whisker pads shows that brain activity spreads beyond touch to include hearing, vision, and higher-order systems, especially when the rats are awake.
Contribution
The study reveals non-uniform modulation of fMRI signals across sensory systems in awake rats using whisker pad stimulation.
Findings
Whisker stimulation activates tactile, auditory, visual, and cerebellar regions in awake rats.
Non-core brain regions respond differently to whisker stimulation compared to primary sensory areas.
High-order sensory processing is only detectable in awake rats, not under anesthesia.
Abstract
Primary sensory systems are traditionally considered separate units, but emerging evidence highlights notable interactions between them. Using a quiet and motion-tolerant zero-echo time functional magnetic resonance imaging technique, we examined brain-wide cross-sensory responses to whisker pad stimulation in awake and anesthetized rats. Our results indicate that whisker pad stimulation activated not only the whisker-mediated tactile system, but also auditory, visual, high-order, and cerebellar regions, demonstrating brain-wide cross-sensory and associative activity. Based on response characteristics, non-core regions responded to stimulation in a markedly different way compared to the primary sensory system, likely reflecting distinct encoding modes among primary sensory, cross-sensory, and integrative processing. Lastly, while low-order sensory activity was detectable under…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced MRI Techniques and Applications
