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Spontaneous neural oscillations influence behavior and sensory representations by suppressing neuronal excitability

Authors :
Vadim V. Nikulin
Jean-Rémi King
Laura Gwilliams
Ryszard Auksztulewicz
Lucia Melloni
Charles E. Schroeder
Luca Iemi
Thomas Thesen
Devinsky O
Saskia Haegens
Yael M. Cycowicz
Werner Doyle
Jason Samaha
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

The ability to process and respond to external input is critical for adaptive behavior. Why, then, do neural and behavioral responses vary across repeated presentations of the same sensory input? Spontaneous fluctuations of neuronal excitability are currently hypothesized to underlie the trial-by-trial variability in sensory processing. To test this, we capitalized on invasive electrophysiology in neurosurgical patients performing an auditory discrimination task with visual cues: specifically, we examined the interaction between prestimulus alpha oscillations, excitability, task performance, and decoded neural stimulus representations. We found that strong prestimulus oscillations in the alpha+ band (i.e., alpha and neighboring frequencies), rather than the aperiodic signal, correlated with a low excitability state, indexed by reduced broadband high-frequency activity. This state was related to slower reaction times and reduced neural stimulus encoding strength. We propose that the alpha+ rhythm modulates excitability, thereby resulting in variability in behavior and sensory representations despite identical input.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........e76e3825d3d3330ce866372b6fb2c1c8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.03.01.433450