341 research outputs found

    Fractals in the Nervous System: conceptual Implications for Theoretical Neuroscience

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    This essay is presented with two principal objectives in mind: first, to document the prevalence of fractals at all levels of the nervous system, giving credence to the notion of their functional relevance; and second, to draw attention to the as yet still unresolved issues of the detailed relationships among power law scaling, self-similarity, and self-organized criticality. As regards criticality, I will document that it has become a pivotal reference point in Neurodynamics. Furthermore, I will emphasize the not yet fully appreciated significance of allometric control processes. For dynamic fractals, I will assemble reasons for attributing to them the capacity to adapt task execution to contextual changes across a range of scales. The final Section consists of general reflections on the implications of the reviewed data, and identifies what appear to be issues of fundamental importance for future research in the rapidly evolving topic of this review

    Executive Functions and Prefrontal Cortex: A Matter of Persistence?

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    Executive function is thought to originates from the dynamics of frontal cortical networks. We examined the dynamic properties of the blood oxygen level dependent time-series measured with functional MRI (fMRI) within the prefrontal cortex (PFC) to test the hypothesis that temporally persistent neural activity underlies performance in three tasks of executive function. A numerical estimate of signal persistence, the Hurst exponent, postulated to represent the coherent firing of cortical networks, was determined and correlated with task performance. Increasing persistence in the lateral PFC was shown to correlate with improved performance during an n-back task. Conversely, we observed a correlation between persistence and increasing commission error ā€“ indicating a failure to inhibit a prepotent response ā€“ during a Go/No-Go task. We propose that persistence within the PFC reflects dynamic network formation and these findings underline the importance of frequency analysis of fMRI time-series in the study of executive functions

    Resting-state fMRI activity predicts unsupervised learning and memory in an immersive virtual reality environment

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    In the real world, learning often proceeds in an unsupervised manner without explicit instructions or feedback. In this study, we employed an experimental paradigm in which subjects explored an immersive virtual reality environment on each of two days. On day 1, subjects implicitly learned the location of 39 objects in an unsupervised fashion. On day 2, the locations of some of the objects were changed, and object location recall performance was assessed and found to vary across subjects. As prior work had shown that functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) measures of resting-state brain activity can predict various measures of brain performance across individuals, we examined whether resting-state fMRI measures could be used to predict object location recall performance. We found a significant correlation between performance and the variability of the resting-state fMRI signal in the basal ganglia, hippocampus, amygdala, thalamus, insula, and regions in the frontal and temporal lobes, regions important for spatial exploration, learning, memory, and decision making. In addition, performance was significantly correlated with resting-state fMRI connectivity between the left caudate and the right fusiform gyrus, lateral occipital complex, and superior temporal gyrus. Given the basal ganglia's role in exploration, these findings suggest that tighter integration of the brain systems responsible for exploration and visuospatial processing may be critical for learning in a complex environment

    Scaleā€free brain dynamics under physical and psychological distress: Preā€treatment effects in women diagnosed with breast cancer

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    Stressful life events are related to negative outcomes, including physical and psychological manifestations of distress, and behavioral deficits. Patients diagnosed with breast cancer report impaired attention and working memory prior to adjuvant therapy, which may be induced by distress. In this article, we examine whether brain dynamics show systematic changes due to the distress associated with cancer diagnosis. We hypothesized that impaired working memory is associated with suppression of ā€œlongā€memoryā€ neuronal dynamics; we tested this by measuring scaleā€free (ā€œfractalā€) brain dynamics, quantified by the Hurst exponent (H). Fractal scaling refers to signals that do not occur at a specific timeā€scale, possessing a spectral power curve P(f)āˆfāˆ’Ī²; they are ā€œlongā€memoryā€ processes, with significant autocorrelations. In a BOLD functional magnetic resonance imaging study, we scanned three groups during a working memory task: women scheduled to receive chemotherapy or radiotherapy and agedā€matched controls. Surprisingly, patients' BOLD signal exhibited greater H with increasing intensity of anticipated treatment. However, an analysis of H and functional connectivity against selfā€reported measures of psychological distress (Worry, Anxiety, Depression) and physical distress (Fatigue, Sleep problems) revealed significant interactions. The modulation of (Worry, Anxiety) versus (Fatigue, Sleep Problems, Depression) showed the strongest effect, where higher worry and lower fatigue was related to reduced H in regions involved in visuospatial search, attention, and memory processing. This is also linked to decreased functional connectivity in these brain regions. Our results indicate that the distress associated with cancer diagnosis alters BOLD scaling, and H is a sensitive measure of the interaction between psychological versus physical distress. Hum Brain Mapp 36:1077ā€“1092, 2015. Ā© 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110706/1/hbm22687-sup-0001-suppinfo01.pdfhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/110706/2/hbm22687.pd

    Efficiency and Cost of Economical Brain Functional Networks

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    Brain anatomical networks are sparse, complex, and have economical small-world properties. We investigated the efficiency and cost of human brain functional networks measured using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) in a factorial design: two groups of healthy old (N = 11; mean age = 66.5 years) and healthy young (N = 15; mean age = 24.7 years) volunteers were each scanned twice in a no-task or ā€œrestingā€ state following placebo or a single dose of a dopamine receptor antagonist (sulpiride 400 mg). Functional connectivity between 90 cortical and subcortical regions was estimated by wavelet correlation analysis, in the frequency interval 0.06ā€“0.11 Hz, and thresholded to construct undirected graphs. These brain functional networks were small-world and economical in the sense of providing high global and local efficiency of parallel information processing for low connection cost. Efficiency was reduced disproportionately to cost in older people, and the detrimental effects of age on efficiency were localised to frontal and temporal cortical and subcortical regions. Dopamine antagonism also impaired global and local efficiency of the network, but this effect was differentially localised and did not interact with the effect of age. Brain functional networks have economical small-world propertiesā€”supporting efficient parallel information transfer at relatively low costā€”which are differently impaired by normal aging and pharmacological blockade of dopamine transmission

    The effects of DMT and associated psychedelics on the human mind and brain

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    This work presents seven investigations conducted with the aim to determine the effects of DMT (a compound which is able to cause remarkable effects in consciousness) and associated psychedelic drugs on the human brain and mind. Including a variety of neuroimaging (EEG, MEG and fMRI), phenomenological, psychometric and naturalistic research methods, these are the first controlled investigations of the impact of DMT in the human resting brain. Results revealed that DMT disrupted several brain mechanisms associated with top-down control (alpha power, integrity of high-level networks, modularity), increased measures related to entropy, or disorder (Lempel-Ziv complexity, novel pairwise connectivity) and immersive states of consciousness (delta/theta power), with some of these effects following the experiential trajectories of the DMT state. We also observed a significant temporal correlation between some of these effects (alpha power and default-mode network integrity fluctuations), which were supported by LSD effects of reduced feedback connectivity and neural adaption mechanisms. suggesting that the psychedelic brain state is one of reduced modularity, increased integration and functional plasticity. These findings were complemented by psychological studies showing that the DMT state is one of immersive visual imagery, intense somatic experiences and partial disconnection from the environment, which we found shared significant overlap with near- death experiences. DMT administration also resulted in positive mental health outcomes in healthy volunteers providing evidence for the first time that DMT may provide a useful alternative to currently- investigated psychedelic treatments. Finally, results from our last study performed in naturalistic environments revealed that psychedelics are able to have a transformative potential on core beliefs concerning the fundamental nature of reality and consciousness for up to 6 months, with important social and bioethical implications. Collectively these results attest to the strong impact that psychedelics have on varied human domains, which range experience, brain activity, mental health, intersubjectivity and beliefs.Open Acces

    Dynamic correlations in ongoing neuronal oscillations in humans - perspectives on brain function and its disorders

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    This Thesis is involved with neuronal oscillations in the human brain and their coordination across time, space and frequency. The aim of the Thesis was to quantify correlations in neuronal oscillations over these dimensions, and to elucidate their significance in cognitive processing and brain disorders. Magnetoencephalographic (MEG) recordings of major depression patients revealed that long-range temporal correlations (LRTC) were decreased, compared to control subjects, in the 5 Hz oscillations in a manner that was dependent on the degree of the disorder. While studying epileptic patients, on the other hand, it was found that the LRTC in neuronal oscillations recorded intracranially with electroencephalography (EEG) were strengthened in the seizure initiation region. A novel approach to map spatial correlations between cortical regions was developed. The method is based on parcellating the cortex to patches and estimating phase synchrony between all patches. Mapping synchrony from inverse-modelled MEG / EEG data revealed wide-spread phase synchronization during a visual working memory task. Furthermore, the network architectures of task-related synchrony were found to be segregated over frequency. Cross-frequency interactions were investigated with analyses of nested brain activity in data recorded with full-bandwidth EEG during a somatosensory detection task. According to these data, the phase of ongoing infra-slow fluctuations (ISF), which were discovered in the frequency band of 0.01-0.1 Hz, was correlated with the amplitude of faster > 1 Hz neuronal oscillations. Strikingly, the behavioral detection performance displayed similar dependency on the ISFs as the > 1 Hz neuronal oscillations. The studies composing this Thesis showed that correlations in neuronal oscillations are functionally related to brain disorders and cognitive processing. Such correlations are suggested to reveal the coordination of neuronal oscillations across time, space and frequency. The results contribute to system-level understanding of brain function
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