intracranial recordings
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

217
(FIVE YEARS 80)

H-INDEX

30
(FIVE YEARS 6)

2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Corentin Jacques ◽  
Jacques Jonas ◽  
Sophie Colnat-Coulbois ◽  
Louis Maillard ◽  
Bruno Rossion

In vivo intracranial recordings of neural activity offer a unique opportunity to understand human brain function. Intracranial electrophysiological (iEEG) activity related to sensory, cognitive or motor events manifests mostly in two types of signals: event-related local field potentials in lower frequency bands (<30 Hz, LF) and broadband activity in the higher end of the frequency spectrum (>30 Hz, High frequency, HF). While most current studies rely exclusively on HF, thought to be more focal and closely related to spiking activity, the relationship between HF and LF signals is unclear, especially in human associative cortex. Here we provide a large-scale in-depth investigation of the spatial and functional relationship between these 2 signals based on intracranial recordings from 121 individual brains (8000 recording sites). We measure selective responses to complex ecologically salient visual stimuli – human faces - across a wide cortical territory in the ventral occipito-temporal cortex (VOTC), with a frequency-tagging method providing high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the same objective quantification of signal and noise for the two frequency ranges. While LF face-selective activity has higher SNR across the VOTC, leading to a larger number of significant electrode contacts especially in the anterior temporal lobe, LF and HF display highly similar spatial, functional, and timing properties. Specifically, and contrary to a widespread assumption, our results point to nearly identical spatial distribution and local spatial extent of LF and HF activity at equal SNR. These observations go a long way towards clarifying the relationship between the two main iEEG signals and reestablish the informative value of LF iEEG to understand human brain function.


Author(s):  
Daniel S Weisholtz ◽  
Gabriel Kreiman ◽  
David A Silbersweig ◽  
Emily Stern ◽  
Brannon Cha ◽  
...  

Abstract The ability to distinguish between negative, positive and neutral valence is a key part of emotion perception. Emotional valence has conceptual meaning that supersedes any particular type of stimulus, although it is typically captured experimentally in association with particular tasks. We sought to identify neural encoding for task-invariant emotional valence. We evaluated whether high gamma responses (HGRs) to visually displayed words conveying emotions could be used to decode emotional valence from HGRs to facial expressions. Intracranial electroencephalography (iEEG) was recorded from fourteen individuals while they participated in two tasks, one involving reading words with positive, negative, and neutral valence, and the other involving viewing faces with positive, negative, and neutral facial expressions. Quadratic discriminant analysis was used to identify information in the HGR that differentiates the three emotion conditions. A classifier was trained on the emotional valence labels from one task and was cross-validated on data from the same task (within-task classifier) as well as the other task (between-task classifier). Emotional valence could be decoded in the left medial orbitofrontal cortex and middle temporal gyrus, both using within-task classifiers as well as between-task classifiers. These observations suggest the presence of task-independent emotional valence information in the signals from these regions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tineke Grent-'t-Jong ◽  
Lucia Melloni ◽  
Peter J. Uhlhaas

Recently, Vesuna et al. proposed a novel circuit mechanism underlying dissociative states using optogenetics and pharmacology in mice in combination with intracranial recordings and electrical stimulation in an epilepsy patient. Specifically, the authors identified a posteromedial cortical delta-rhythm that underlies states of dissociation. In the following, we would like to critically review these findings in the context of the human literature on dissociation as well as highlight the challenges in translational neuroscience to link complex behavioral phenotypes in psychiatric syndromes to circumscribed circuit mechanisms.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haoxin Zhang ◽  
Ivan Skelin ◽  
Shiting Ma ◽  
Michelle Paff ◽  
Michael A Yassa ◽  
...  

Intracranial recordings from the human amygdala and the hippocampus during an emotional memory encoding and discrimination task reveal increased awake sharp-wave/ripples (aSWR) after encoding of emotional compared to neutral stimuli. Further, post-encoding aSWR-locked memory reinstatement in the amygdala and the hippocampus was predictive of later memory discrimination. These findings provide electrophysiological evidence that post-encoding aSWRs enhance memory for emotional events.


Author(s):  
Sameer A. Sheth ◽  
Kelly R. Bijanki ◽  
Brian Metzger ◽  
Anusha Allawala ◽  
Victoria Pirtle ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katherine Wilson Scangos ◽  
Ankit N. Khambhati ◽  
Patrick M. Daly ◽  
Lucy W. Owen ◽  
Jeremy R. Manning ◽  
...  

Major depressive disorder is a common and disabling disorder with high rates of treatment resistance. Evidence suggests it is characterized by distributed network dysfunction that may be variable across patients, challenging the identification of quantitative biological substrates. We carried out this study to determine whether application of a novel computational approach to a large sample of high spatiotemporal resolution direct neural recordings in humans could unlock the functional organization and coordinated activity patterns of depression networks. This group level analysis of depression networks from heterogenous intracranial recordings was possible due to application of a correlational model-based method for inferring whole-brain neural activity. We then applied a network framework to discover brain dynamics across this model that could classify depression. We found a highly distributed pattern of neural activity and connectivity across cortical and subcortical structures that was present in the majority of depressed subjects. Furthermore, we found that this depression signature consisted of two subnetworks across individuals. The first was characterized by left temporal lobe hypoconnectivity and pathological beta activity. The second was characterized by a hypoactive, but hyperconnected left frontal cortex. These findings have applications toward personalization of therapy.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (9) ◽  
pp. 2255
Author(s):  
Brynn E. Sherman ◽  
Kathryn N. Graves ◽  
David M. Huberdeau ◽  
Christopher F.A. Benjamin ◽  
Imran H. Quraishi ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Manuela Costa ◽  
Diego Lozano-Soldevilla ◽  
Antonio Gil-Nagel ◽  
Rafael Toledano ◽  
Carina Oehrn ◽  
...  

AbstractMemory for aversive events is central to survival, but can also become maladaptive in psychiatric disorders. Emotional memory relies on the amygdala and hippocampus, but the neural dynamics of their communication during emotional memory encoding remain unknown. Using simultaneous intracranial recordings from both structures in human patients, we show that in response to emotionally aversive, but not neutral, visual stimuli, the amygdala transmits unidirectional influence on the hippocampus through theta oscillations. Critically, successful emotional memory encoding depends on the precise amygdala theta phase to which hippocampal gamma activity and neuronal firing couple. The phase difference between subsequently remembered vs. not-remembered emotional stimuli translates to ∼25-45 milliseconds, a time period that enables lagged coherence between amygdala and downstream hippocampal gamma activity. These results reveal a mechanism whereby amygdala theta phase coordinates transient coherence between amygdala and hippocampal gamma activity to facilitate the encoding of aversive memories in humans.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
James E. Kragel ◽  
Youssef Ezzyat ◽  
Bradley C. Lega ◽  
Michael R. Sperling ◽  
Gregory A. Worrell ◽  
...  

AbstractEpisodic recall depends upon the reinstatement of cortical activity present during the formation of a memory. Evidence from functional neuroimaging and invasive recordings in humans suggest that reinstatement organizes our memories by time or content, yet the neural systems involved in reinstating these unique types of information remain unclear. Here, combining computational modeling and intracranial recordings from 69 epilepsy patients, we show that two cortical systems uniquely reinstate the semantic content and temporal context of previously studied items during free recall. Examining either the posterior medial or anterior temporal networks, we find that forward encoding models trained on the brain’s response to the temporal and semantic attributes of items can predict the serial position and semantic category of unseen items. During memory recall, these models uniquely link reinstatement of temporal context and semantic content to these posterior and anterior networks, respectively. These findings demonstrate how specialized cortical systems enable the human brain to target specific memories.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuhao Huang ◽  
Bina W. Kakusa ◽  
Austin Feng ◽  
Sandra Gattas ◽  
Rajat S. Shivacharan ◽  
...  

AbstractThe insulo-opercular network functions critically not only in encoding taste, but also in guiding behavior based on anticipated food availability. However, there remains no direct measurement of insulo-opercular activity when humans anticipate taste. Here, we collect direct, intracranial recordings during a food task that elicits anticipatory and consummatory taste responses, and during ad libitum consumption of meals. While cue-specific high-frequency broadband (70–170 Hz) activity predominant in the left posterior insula is selective for taste-neutral cues, sparse cue-specific regions in the anterior insula are selective for palatable cues. Latency analysis reveals this insular activity is preceded by non-discriminatory activity in the frontal operculum. During ad libitum meal consumption, time-locked high-frequency broadband activity at the time of food intake discriminates food types and is associated with cue-specific activity during the task. These findings reveal spatiotemporally-specific activity in the human insulo-opercular cortex that underlies anticipatory evaluation of food across both controlled and naturalistic settings.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document