In a recent study described in the journal Neuron, the Emily Macé and collaborators of the Botond Roska team demonstrated how functional ultrasound imaging can produce high-resolution full-motion images of the brain for specific behaviors in mice. This non-invasive technique has broad application prospects in ophthalmology, neurological and psychiatric diseases. “Functional ultrasound imaging produces higher resolution images, and is simpler, cheaper, and easier to use than functional magnetic resonance…