PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Antoine Sauvage AU - Guillaume Hubert AU - Jonathan Touboul AU - Jérôme Ribot TI - The hemodynamic signal as a first-order low-pass temporal filter: Evidence and implications for neuroimaging studies AID - 10.1101/077859 DP - 2016 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 077859 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/09/27/077859.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/09/27/077859.full AB - Neuronal activation triggers blood flow and hemoglobin deoxygenation. These hemodynamic signals can be recorded through magnetic resonance or optical imaging, and allows inferring neural activity in response to stimuli. These techniques are widely used to uncover functional brain architectures. However, their accuracy suffers from distortions inherent to hemodynamic responses and noise. The analysis of these signals currently relies on models of impulse hemodynamic responses to brief stimuli. Here, in order to infer precise functional architectures, we focused on integrated signals associated to the dynamical response of functional maps. To this end, we recorded orientation and direction maps in cat primary visual cortex and confronted two protocols: the conventional episodic stimulation technique and a continuous, periodic stimulation paradigm. Conventional methods show that the dynamics of activation and deactivation of the functional maps follows a linear first-order differential equation representing a low-pass filter. Comparison with the periodic stimulation methods confirmed this observation: the phase shifts and magnitude attenuations extracted at various frequencies were consistent with a low-pass filter with a 5 s time constant. This dynamics open new avenues in the analysis of neuroimaging data that differs from common methods based on the hemodynamic response function. In particular, we demonstrate that inverting this first-order low-pass filter minimized the distortions of the signal and enabled a much faster and accurate reconstruction of functional maps.