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Frontoparietal Beta Amplitude Modulation and its Interareal Cross-frequency Coupling in Visual Working Memory.

Authors :
Liang, Wei-Kuang
Tseng, Philip
Yeh, Jia-Rong
Huang, Norden E.
Juan, Chi-Hung
Source :
Neuroscience. Apr2021, Vol. 460, p69-87. 19p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

[Display omitted] • AM in mid-frontal beta oscillation correlated with people's working memory capacity. • Changes in working memory via brain stimulation were tracked by changes in beta AMs. • Theta phase-beta AM intersite couplings associated with people's working memory. • Brain stimulation strengthened parietal-to-frontal theta phase-beta AM couplings. Visual working memory (VWM) relies on sustained neural activities that code information via various oscillatory frequencies. Previous studies, however, have emphasized time–frequency power changes, while overlooking the possibility that rhythmic amplitude variations can also code frequency-specific VWM information in a completely different dimension. Here, we employed the recently-developed Holo-Hilbert spectral analysis to characterize such nonlinear amplitude modulation(s) (AM) underlying VWM in the frontoparietal systems. We found that the strength of AM in mid-frontal beta and gamma oscillations during late VWM maintenance and VWM retrieval correlated with people's VWM performance. When behavioral performance was altered with transcranial electric stimulation, AM power changes during late VWM maintenance in beta, but not gamma, tracked participants' VWM variations. This beta AM likely codes information by varying its amplitude in theta period for long-range propagation, as our connectivity analysis revealed that interareal theta-beta couplings—bidirectional between mid-frontal and right-parietal during VWM maintenance and unidirectional from right-parietal to left-middle-occipital during late VWM maintenance and retrieval—underpins VWM performance and individual differences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03064522
Volume :
460
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Neuroscience
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
149472350
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroscience.2021.02.013