Updating The First Read of rfMRI Literature

Back to 2006, when I came to picking up my first postdoc training in Beijing Normal University, I read four papers about resting state fMRI (RfMRI), which I strongly recommend to the new people coming to this field. Until now, they are still holding the dominant impacts on this field.


  • B. Biswal, F. Yetkin, V. Haughton and J. Hyde, Functional connectivity in the motor cortex of resting human brain using echo-planar MRI, Magn. Reson. Med. 34 (4) (1995), pp. 537–541. [DOI]
  • M.E. Raichle, A.M. MacLeod, A.Z. Snyder, W.J. Powers, D.A. Gusnard, G.L. Shulman, A default mode of brain function, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 98 (2001), pp. 676–682. [ABSTRACT]
  • M.D. Greicius, B. Krasnow, A.L. Reiss and V. Menon, Functional connectivity in the resting brain: a network analysis of the default mode hypothesis, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 100 (2003), pp. 253–258. [ABSTRACT]
  • M.D. Fox, A.Z. Snyder, J.L. Vincent, M. Corbetta, D.C. Van Essen and M.E. Raichle, The human brain is intrinsically organized into dynamic, anticorrelated functional networks, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 102 (2005), pp. 9673–9678. [ABSTRACT]

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