Our understanding of headache is constantly evolving and is subject to ongoing investigation and debate. In the 2022 Nature Reviews Disease Primers on Migraine, authors noted that "[a]lthough understanding migraine attack pathophysiology has substantially improved, the pathogenesis of the disease migraine … remains poorly understood." 1 The authors go on to outline what is known, including the phenomenon of spreading depolarization. 1 For several of the agreed-upon aspects of headache pathophysiology, including this one, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has played a key role. 2 Neuroimaging has made these contributions in part because it is a non-invasive method for bridging our understanding between basic science findings in animal models and the human brain. An example is the role of fMRI (which in essence tracks changes in oxygenated blood flow) in our understanding of spreading cortical depolarization. 3 As with many other avenues for scientific discovery, the most compelling use for fMRI is in parallel with other techniques.