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1.
Nat Commun ; 9(1): 4437, 2018 10 25.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30361627

ABSTRACT

Focal electrical stimulation of the brain incites a cascade of neural activity that propagates from the stimulated region to both nearby and remote areas, offering the potential to control the activity of brain networks. Understanding how exogenous electrical signals perturb such networks in humans is key to its clinical translation. To investigate this, we applied electrical stimulation to subregions of the medial temporal lobe in 26 neurosurgical patients fitted with indwelling electrodes. Networks of low-frequency (5-13 Hz) spectral coherence predicted stimulation-evoked increases in theta (5-8 Hz) power, particularly when stimulation was applied in or adjacent to white matter. Stimulation tended to decrease power in the high-frequency broadband (HFB; 50-200 Hz) range, and these modulations were correlated with HFB-based networks in a subset of subjects. Our results demonstrate that functional connectivity is predictive of causal changes in the brain, capturing evoked activity across brain regions and frequency bands.


Subject(s)
Nerve Net/physiology , Temporal Lobe/physiology , Theta Rhythm/physiology , Electric Stimulation , Evoked Potentials/physiology , Humans , White Matter/physiology
2.
Nat Commun ; 8(1): 1704, 2017 11 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29167419

ABSTRACT

The idea that synchronous neural activity underlies cognition has driven an extensive body of research in human and animal neuroscience. Yet, insufficient data on intracranial electrical connectivity has precluded a direct test of this hypothesis in a whole-brain setting. Through the lens of memory encoding and retrieval processes, we construct whole-brain connectivity maps of fast gamma (30-100 Hz) and slow theta (3-8 Hz) spectral neural activity, based on data from 294 neurosurgical patients fitted with indwelling electrodes. Here we report that gamma networks desynchronize and theta networks synchronize during encoding and retrieval. Furthermore, for nearly all brain regions we studied, gamma power rises as that region desynchronizes with gamma activity elsewhere in the brain, establishing gamma as a largely asynchronous phenomenon. The abundant phenomenon of theta synchrony is positively correlated with a brain region's gamma power, suggesting a predominant low-frequency mechanism for inter-regional communication.


Subject(s)
Cognition/physiology , Electroencephalography Phase Synchronization/physiology , Theta Rhythm/physiology , Animals , Brain/anatomy & histology , Brain/physiology , Connectome , Gamma Rhythm/physiology , Humans , Memory/physiology , Mental Recall/physiology
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