Abstrakt
Gamma frequency activity (30-150 Hz) is induced in cognitive tasks and is thought to reflect underlying neural processes. Gamma frequency activity can be recorded directly from the human brain using intracranial electrodes implanted in patients undergoing treatment for drug-resistant epilepsy. Previous studies have independently explored narrowband oscillations in the local field potential and broadband power increases. It is not clear, however, which processes contribute to human brain gamma frequency activity, or their dynamics and roles during memory processing. Here a large dataset of intracranial recordings obtained during encoding of words from 101 patients was used to detect, characterize and compare induced gamma frequency activity events. Individual bursts of gamma frequency activity were isolated in the time-frequency domain to determine their spectral features, including peak frequency, amplitude, frequency span, and duration. We found two distinct types of gamma frequency activity events that showed either narrowband or broadband frequency spans revealing characteristic spectral properties. Narrowband events, the predominant type, were induced by word presentations following an initial induction of broadband events, which were temporally separated and selectively correlated with evoked response potentials, suggesting that they reflect different neural activities and play different roles during memory encoding. The two gamma frequency activity types were differentially modulated during encoding of subsequently recalled and forgotten words. In conclusion, we found evidence for two distinct activity types induced in the gamma frequency range during cognitive processing. Separating these two gamma frequency activity components contributes to the current understanding of electrophysiological biomarkers, and may prove useful for emerging neurotechnologies targeting, mapping and modulating distinct neurophysiological processes in normal and epileptogenic brain.
Cytowania
-
7 7
CrossRef
-
0
Web of Science
-
6 5
Scopus
Autorzy (16)
Cytuj jako
Pełna treść
pełna treść publikacji nie jest dostępna w portalu
Słowa kluczowe
Informacje szczegółowe
- Kategoria:
- Publikacja w czasopiśmie
- Typ:
- artykuł w czasopiśmie wyróżnionym w JCR
- Opublikowano w:
-
Brain: A Journal of Neurology
nr 140,
strony 1337 - 1350,
ISSN: 0006-8950 - Język:
- angielski
- Rok wydania:
- 2017
- Opis bibliograficzny:
- Kucewicz M., Berry B., Kremen V., Brinkmann B., Sperling M., Jobst B., Gross R., Lega B., Sheth S., Stein J., Das S., Gorniak R., Stead S., Rizzuto D., Kahana M., Worrell G.: Dissecting gamma frequency activities during human memory processing// Brain: A Journal of Neurology. -Vol. 140, nr. 5 (2017), s.1337-1350
- DOI:
- Cyfrowy identyfikator dokumentu elektronicznego (otwiera się w nowej karcie) 10.1093/brain/awx043
- Weryfikacja:
- Politechnika Gdańska
wyświetlono 137 razy
Publikacje, które mogą cię zainteresować
Widespread theta synchrony and high-frequency desynchronization underlies enhanced cognition
- E. Solomon,
- J. Kragiel,
- M. R. Sperling
- + 12 autorów
High frequency oscillations in human memory and cognition: a neurophysiological substrate of engrams?
- M. Kucewicz,
- J. Garcia Salinas,
- J. Cimbalnik
- + 2 autorów
Independent dynamics of slow, intermediate, and fast intracranial EEG spectral activities during human memory formation
- V. S. Marks,
- K. V. Saboo,
- C. Topcu
- + 5 autorów
Hotspot of human verbal memory encoding in the left anterior prefrontal cortex
- Ç. Topçu,
- V. Marks,
- K. Saboo
- + 5 autorów