A large number of interrelated issues confront the individual who seeks a better understanding of neuroimaging studies; these include types of hypothesis, study design, properties of different types of scanners, the choice of methods used for image interpretation, and factors related to the population under study. Designing an introduction to this area that is both sophisticated enough to do justice to the issues involved and not overwhelming is not simple. This text, which arose in large part from a seminar series at Massachusetts General Hospital, uses the strategy of having prominent researchers provide in-depth discussions of examples from their own work, supplemented by brief pertinent general reviews. Rather than grouping studies by diagnostic category, the chapter authors focus on examining experimental paradigms, often comparing how a given paradigm is used in more than one disorder to illuminate how experiment and disorder interact.