1,579 research outputs found

    Interictal Functional Connectivity of Human Epileptic Networks Assessed by Intracerebral EEG and BOLD Signal Fluctuations

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    In this study, we aimed to demonstrate whether spontaneous fluctuations in the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal derived from resting state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) reflect spontaneous neuronal activity in pathological brain regions as well as in regions spared by epileptiform discharges. This is a crucial issue as coherent fluctuations of fMRI signals between remote brain areas are now widely used to define functional connectivity in physiology and in pathophysiology. We quantified functional connectivity using non-linear measures of cross-correlation between signals obtained from intracerebral EEG (iEEG) and resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) in 5 patients suffering from intractable temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE). Functional connectivity was quantified with both modalities in areas exhibiting different electrophysiological states (epileptic and non affected regions) during the interictal period. Functional connectivity as measured from the iEEG signal was higher in regions affected by electrical epileptiform abnormalities relative to non-affected areas, whereas an opposite pattern was found for functional connectivity measured from the BOLD signal. Significant negative correlations were found between the functional connectivities of iEEG and BOLD signal when considering all pairs of signals (theta, alpha, beta and broadband) and when considering pairs of signals in regions spared by epileptiform discharges (in broadband signal). This suggests differential effects of epileptic phenomena on electrophysiological and hemodynamic signals and/or an alteration of the neurovascular coupling secondary to pathological plasticity in TLE even in regions spared by epileptiform discharges. In addition, indices of directionality calculated from both modalities were consistent showing that the epileptogenic regions exert a significant influence onto the non epileptic areas during the interictal period. This study shows that functional connectivity measured by iEEG and BOLD signals give complementary but sometimes inconsistent information in TLE

    The role of multi-scale phase synchronization and cross-frequency interactions in cognitive integration

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    Neuronal processing is distributed into anatomically distinct, largely specialized, neuronal populations. These populations undergo rhythmic fluctuations in excitability, which are commonly known as neuronal oscillations. Electrophysiological studies of neuronal activity have shown that phase synchronization of oscillations within frequencies characterizes both resting state and task execution and that its strength is correlated with task performance. Therefore phase-synchronization within frequencies is thought to support communication between oscillating neuronal populations and thereby integration and coordination of anatomically distributed processing in cognitive functions. However, it has remained open if and how phase synchronization is associated with directional flow of information. Furthermore, oscillations and synchronization are observed concurrently in multiple frequencies, which are thought to underlie distinct computational functions. Little is known how oscillations and synchronized networks of different frequencies in the human brain are integrated and enable unified cognitive function and experience. In the first study of this thesis, we developed a measure of directed connectivity in networks of coupled oscillators, called Phase Transfer Entropy (Phase TE) and tested if Phase TE could detect directional flow in simulated data in the presence of noise and signal mixing. Results showed that Phase TE indeed reliably detected information flow under these conditions and was computationally efficient. In the other three studies, we investigated if two different forms of inter-areal cross-frequency coupling (CFC), namely cross-frequency phase synchrony (CFS) and phase-amplitude coupling (PAC), could support integration and coordination of neuronal processing distributed across frequency bands in the human brain. In the second study, we analyzed source-reconstructed magneto- and electroencephalographic (M/EEG) data to investigate whether inter-areal CFS could be observed between within-frequency synchronized networks and thereby support the coordination of spectrally distributed processing in visual working memory (VWM). The results showed that CFS was increased during VWM maintenance among theta to gamma frequency bands and the strength of CFS networks predicted individual VWM capacity. Spectral patterns of CFS were found to be different from PAC, indicating complementary roles for both mechanisms. In the third study, we analyzed source-reconstructed M/EEG data to investigate whether inter-areal CFS and PAC could be observed during two multi-object visual tracking tasks and thereby support visual attention. PAC was found to be significantly correlated with object load in both tasks, and CFS in one task. Further, patterns of CFS and PAC differed significantly between subjects with high and low capacity for visual attention. In the fourth study, we analyzed intracerebral stereo-electroencephalographic data (SEEG) and source-reconstructed MEG data to investigate whether CFS and PAC are present also in resting state. Further, in order to address concerns about observations of CFC being spurious and caused by non-sinusoidal or non-zero mean signal waveforms, we introduced a new approach to identify true inter-areal CFC connections and discard potentially spurious ones. We observed both inter-areal CFS and PAC, and showed that a significant part of connections was unambiguously true and non-spurious. Spatial profiles differed between CFS and PAC, but were consistent across datasets. Together, the results from studies II-IV provide evidence that inter-areal CFS and PAC, in complementary ways, connect frequency-specific phase-synchronized networks that involve functionally specialized regions across the cortex to support complex functions such as VWM and attention, and also characterize the resting state. Inter-areal CFC thus may be crucial for the coordination and integration of spectrally distributed processing and the emergence of introspectively coherent cognitive function.Keskeinen kysymys aivotutkimuksessa on, kuinka ajattelu ja kognitio syntyvät ihmisaivojen 10^15 hermosolussa. Informaation käsittely aivoissa tapahtuu suurissa hermosolupopulaatioissa, jotka ovat toiminnallisesti erikoistuneita ja anatomisesti eroteltuja eri aivoalueille. Niiden aktivaatiorakenteiden jaksollisia muutoksia kutsutaan aivorytmeiksi eli oskillaatioiksi. Hermosolupopulaatioiden välistä viestintää edesauttaa niiden toiminnan samantahtisuus eli synkronoituminen. Sähköfysiologisissa tutkimuksissa on havaittu aivorytmien synkronoituvan sekä lepomittausten että tehtävien suorituksen aikana siten että tämä synkronoituminen ennustaa kognitiivissa tehtävissä suoriutumista. Oskillaatioiden vaihesynkronia ei kuitenkaan kerro niiden välisen vuorovaikutuksen suunnasta. Tämän lisäksi oskillaatioita ja niiden välistä synkroniaa havaitaan yhtäaikaisesti lukuisilla eri taajuuksilla, joiden ajatellaan olevan vastuussa erillisistä laskennallisista ja kognitiivisista toiminnoista. Toistaiseksi on kuitenkin jäänyt kartoittamatta, miten informaation käsittely eri taajuuksilla yhdistetään yhtenäisiksi kognitiivisiksi toiminnoiksi, ja havaitaanko myös eri taajuisten oskillaatioverkkojen välillä synkroniaa. Väitöskirjan ensimmäisessä osatyössä on kehitetty uusi tapata mitata oskillaattoriverkkojen vuorovaikutusten suuntia, jonka toimivuus todennettiin simuloimalla synkronoituneita hermosolupopulaatioita. Väitöskirjan muissa osatöissä on tutkittu havaitaanko ihmisaivoissa eri taajuisten oskillaatioiden välistä synkronoitumista. Erityisesti tutkittiin kahta erilaista synkronian muotoa, joista ensimmäinen (’cross- frequency phase synchrony’,CFS) mittaa kahden oskillaation välistä vaihesuhdetta ja toinen (’phase-amplitude coupling’, PAC) vaiheen ja amplitudin suhdetta. Väitöskirjan toisessa osassa tutkittiin, selittääkö CFS koehenkilöiden suoriutumista näkötyömuistitehtävässä. Tutkimukseen osallistuneilta koehenkilöiltä mitattiin aivosähkökäyrä (EEG) ja aivomagneettikäyrä (MEG), joiden avulla selvitettiin havaitaanko aivoalueiden välistä synkroniaa (CFS). Tutkimustulokset osoittivat, että koehenkilöiden CFS oli korkeampi näkötyömuistitehtävän mielessä pitämisen aikana theta-taajuuksista gamma-taajuuksiin asti ja että CFS-verkkojen vahvuus ennusti yksilöllistä työmuistikapasiteettia. Kolmannessa tutkimuksessa analysoitiin MEG- ja EEG-aivokuvantamislaitteita käyttäen onko aivoalueiden välillä CFS:ä ja PAC:a kahdessa näkötarkkaavaisuustehtävässä. PAC lisääntyi tilastollisesti merkitsevästi tehtävän vaikeuden mukaan kummassakin tehtävässä, kun taas CFS lisääntyi yhdessä tehtävässä. Lisäksi CFS ja PAC taajuusparit olivat erilaisia hyvin suoriutuvien koehenkilöiden sekä heikosti suoriutuvien koehenkilöiden välillä. Neljännessä tutkimuksessa tutkittiin havaitaanko CFS:ä ja PAC:a aivojen lepotilassa. Aivokuoren aktiivisuutta mitattiin MEG:llä sekä epilepsiapotilailta aivoihin kirurgisesti asetetuilla elektrodeilla. CFS:ä sekä PAC:a havaittiin kummallakin menetelmällä. Lisäksi kehitimme menetelmän joka vähentää väärien havaintojen todennäköisyyttä ja lisää aitojen CFS ja PAC yhteyksien havaitsemista. Tulokset osoittavat, että merkittävä osuus yhteyksistä aivoalueiden välillä on aitoja. CFS- ja PAC-profiilit erosivat toisistaan, mutta olivat samanlaisia eri menetelmillä tutkittaessa. Yhdistettynä tulokset tutkimuksista II–IV viittaavat siihen, että CFS ja PAC yhdistävät eri taajuuksille ja aivoalueille hajautettua informaation käsittelyä. CFS:sää ja PAC:ia havaittiin aivojen lepotilassa mutta myös tarkkaavaisuus- ja näkötyömuistitehtävän aikana. CFS ja PAC saattavat mahdollistaa eri taajuisten aivorytmien ja hajautettujen prosessien koordinaation ja yhdistämisen

    Causal hierarchy within the thalamo-cortical network in spike and wave discharges

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    Background: Generalised spike wave (GSW) discharges are the electroencephalographic (EEG) hallmark of absence seizures, clinically characterised by a transitory interruption of ongoing activities and impaired consciousness, occurring during states of reduced awareness. Several theories have been proposed to explain the pathophysiology of GSW discharges and the role of thalamus and cortex as generators. In this work we extend the existing theories by hypothesizing a role for the precuneus, a brain region neglected in previous works on GSW generation but already known to be linked to consciousness and awareness. We analysed fMRI data using dynamic causal modelling (DCM) to investigate the effective connectivity between precuneus, thalamus and prefrontal cortex in patients with GSW discharges. Methodology and Principal Findings: We analysed fMRI data from seven patients affected by Idiopathic Generalized Epilepsy (IGE) with frequent GSW discharges and significant GSW-correlated haemodynamic signal changes in the thalamus, the prefrontal cortex and the precuneus. Using DCM we assessed their effective connectivity, i.e. which region drives another region. Three dynamic causal models were constructed: GSW was modelled as autonomous input to the thalamus (model A), ventromedial prefrontal cortex (model B), and precuneus (model C). Bayesian model comparison revealed Model C (GSW as autonomous input to precuneus), to be the best in 5 patients while model A prevailed in two cases. At the group level model C dominated and at the population-level the p value of model C was ∼1. Conclusion: Our results provide strong evidence that activity in the precuneus gates GSW discharges in the thalamo-(fronto) cortical network. This study is the first demonstration of a causal link between haemodynamic changes in the precuneus - an index of awareness - and the occurrence of pathological discharges in epilepsy. © 2009 Vaudano et al

    Working memory revived in older adults by synchronizing rhythmic brain circuits

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    Published in final edited form as: Nat Neurosci. 2019 May ; 22(5): 820–827. doi:10.1038/s41593-019-0371-x.Understanding normal brain aging and developing methods to maintain or improve cognition in older adults are major goals of fundamental and translational neuroscience. Here we show a core feature of cognitive decline—working-memory deficits—emerges from disconnected local and long-range circuits instantiated by theta–gamma phase–amplitude coupling in temporal cortex and theta phase synchronization across frontotemporal cortex. We developed a noninvasive stimulation procedure for modulating long-range theta interactions in adults aged 60–76 years. After 25 min of stimulation, frequency-tuned to individual brain network dynamics, we observed a preferential increase in neural synchronization patterns and the return of sender–receiver relationships of information flow within and between frontotemporal regions. The end result was rapid improvement in working-memory performance that outlasted a 50 min post-stimulation period. The results provide insight into the physiological foundations of age-related cognitive impairment and contribute to groundwork for future non-pharmacological interventions targeting aspects of cognitive decline.Accepted manuscrip

    How can I investigate causal brain networks with iEEG?

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    While many human imaging methodologies probe the structural and functional connectivity of the brain, techniques to investigate cortical networks in a causal and directional manner are critical but limited. The use of iEEG enables several approaches to directly characterize brain regions that are functionally connected and in some cases also establish directionality of these connections. In this chapter we focus on the basis, method and application of the cortico-cortical evoked potential (CCEP), whereby electrical pulses applied to one set of intracranial electrodes yields an electrically-induced brain response at local and remote regions. In this chapter, CCEPs are first contextualized within common brain connectivity methods used to define cortical networks and how CCEP adds unique information. Second, the practical and analytical considerations when using CCEP are discussed. Third, we review the neurophysiology underlying CCEPs and the applications of CCEPs including exploring functional and pathological brain networks and probing brain plasticity. Finally, we end with a discussion of limitations, caveats, and directions to improve CCEP utilization in the future.Comment: Forthcoming chapter in "Intracranial EEG for Cognitive Neuroscience

    Alterations in prefrontal-limbic functional activation and connectivity in chronic stress-induced visceral hyperalgesia.

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    Repeated water avoidance stress (WAS) induces sustained visceral hyperalgesia (VH) in rats measured as enhanced visceromotor response to colorectal distension (CRD). This model incorporates two characteristic features of human irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), VH and a prominent role of stress in the onset and exacerbation of IBS symptoms. Little is known regarding central mechanisms underlying the stress-induced VH. Here, we applied an autoradiographic perfusion method to map regional and network-level neural correlates of VH. Adult male rats were exposed to WAS or sham treatment for 1 hour/day for 10 days. The visceromotor response was measured before and after the treatment. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) mapping was performed by intravenous injection of radiotracer ([(14)C]-iodoantipyrine) while the rat was receiving a 60-mmHg CRD or no distension. Regional CBF-related tissue radioactivity was quantified in autoradiographic images of brain slices and analyzed in 3-dimensionally reconstructed brains with statistical parametric mapping. Compared to sham rats, stressed rats showed VH in association with greater CRD-evoked activation in the insular cortex, amygdala, and hypothalamus, but reduced activation in the prelimbic area (PrL) of prefrontal cortex. We constrained results of seed correlation analysis by known structural connectivity of the PrL to generate structurally linked functional connectivity (SLFC) of the PrL. Dramatic differences in the SLFC of PrL were noted between stressed and sham rats under distension. In particular, sham rats showed negative correlation between the PrL and amygdala, which was absent in stressed rats. The altered pattern of functional brain activation is in general agreement with that observed in IBS patients in human brain imaging studies, providing further support for the face and construct validity of the WAS model for IBS. The absence of prefrontal cortex-amygdala anticorrelation in stressed rats is consistent with the notion that impaired corticolimbic modulation acts as a central mechanism underlying stress-induced VH

    Spread of epileptiform activity in the immature rat neocortex studied with voltage-sensitive dyes and laser scanning microscopy

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    1. Adult rats and rats with a postnatal age of 3-29 days (PN 3-29) were used for the preparation of in vitro slices of the frontal neocortex. Epileptiform activity was induced by bath application of the gamma-aminobutyric acid-A (GABAA) receptor antagonists bicuculline or picrotoxin. 2. The voltage-sensitive dye RH 414 and a laser scanning microscope were used for multiple-site optical recordings of membrane potential changes associated with epileptiform activity. Optical signals were compared with simultaneously measured extra-cellular field potentials. 3. Optical signals could be reliably recorded for the duration of the experiments (2-4 h). Extracellular recordings of convulsant-induced paroxysmal depolarizing shifts (PDSs) in slices stained with RH 414 were comparable with those obtained in unstained slices. Changes in dye signals in response to reductions in extracellular calcium, addition of tetrodotoxin (TTX), or application of excitatory amino acid receptor antagonists indicate that the fluorescence changes correlate well with established electrophysiological measures of epileptiform activity. 4. In slices from adult animals, dye signals were observed at all recording sites. The response with the shortest latency occurred invariably at the site of stimulation, and activity spread rapidly in both vertical and horizontal directions. Spread was significantly faster in the vertical than in the horizontal direction. 5. Epileptiform activity was absent or only weakly expressed in slices from PN 3-9 animals. Activity was detectable predominantly in upper cortical layers. 6. Dye signals were observed at all measurement points in slices from PN 10-19 animals. In this age group, peak amplitude increased with spread of activity from lower to upper cortical layers. There was no significant difference between the speed of propagation in the vertical and in the horizontal directions. Spontaneous epileptiform activity occurred at a high rate in the PN 10-19 age group, and signals associated with spontaneous epileptiform events were largest in upper layers. 7. In the PN 10-19 age group, optical signals were characterized by the repetitive occurrence of PDS discharges superimposed on a sustained response. The amplitude of the sustained response decreased with increasing distance from the site of stimulation. Analysis of the latencies revealed that the superimposed PDS-like events were generated at multiple sites within the scanning area. Amplitude and rate of rise were largest in slices from PN 10-19 animals. These values declined with ongoing development

    Directed Cortical Information Flow during Human Object Recognition: Analyzing Induced EEG Gamma-Band Responses in Brain's Source Space

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    The increase of induced gamma-band responses (iGBRs; oscillations >30 Hz) elicited by familiar (meaningful) objects is well established in electroencephalogram (EEG) research. This frequency-specific change at distinct locations is thought to indicate the dynamic formation of local neuronal assemblies during the activation of cortical object representations. As analytically power increase is just a property of a single location, phase-synchrony was introduced to investigate the formation of large-scale networks between spatially distant brain sites. However, classical phase-synchrony reveals symmetric, pair-wise correlations and is not suited to uncover the directionality of interactions. Here, we investigated the neural mechanism of visual object processing by means of directional coupling analysis going beyond recording sites, but rather assessing the directionality of oscillatory interactions between brain areas directly. This study is the first to identify the directionality of oscillatory brain interactions in source space during human object recognition and suggests that familiar, but not unfamiliar, objects engage widespread reciprocal information flow. Directionality of cortical information-flow was calculated based upon an established Granger-Causality coupling-measure (partial-directed coherence; PDC) using autoregressive modeling. To enable comparison with previous coupling studies lacking directional information, phase-locking analysis was applied, using wavelet-based signal decompositions. Both, autoregressive modeling and wavelet analysis, revealed an augmentation of iGBRs during the presentation of familiar objects relative to unfamiliar controls, which was localized to inferior-temporal, superior-parietal and frontal brain areas by means of distributed source reconstruction. The multivariate analysis of PDC evaluated each possible direction of brain interaction and revealed widespread reciprocal information-transfer during familiar object processing. In contrast, unfamiliar objects entailed a sparse number of only unidirectional connections converging to parietal areas. Considering the directionality of brain interactions, the current results might indicate that successful activation of object representations is realized through reciprocal (feed-forward and feed-backward) information-transfer of oscillatory connections between distant, functionally specific brain areas
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