A bone-conduction system for auditory stimulation in MRI

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Abstract

Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides an excellent noninvasive method for imaging of the human body, though it presents a critical problem of loud machine noise during scanning which prevents the subjects from being able to listen to auditory stimuli. In this report, we describe a method of auditory stimulus presentation in an MRI system in which a bone-conduction speaker system is used to reduce exposure to airborne noise while maintaining effective auditory stimulation. The results indicate that this method guarantees high-quality MRI structural data during vowel production in phonation- synchronized MRI scans. The method is also shown to be beneficial for functional MRI (fMRI) experiments: activation patterns were equivalent to those of conventional air-conduction systems with less noise exposure.

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Nota, Y., Kitamura, T., Honda, K., Takemoto, H., Hirata, H., Shimada, Y., … Masaki, S. (2007). A bone-conduction system for auditory stimulation in MRI. Acoustical Science and Technology, 28(1), 33–38. https://doi.org/10.1250/ast.28.33

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