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Motor cortical and other cortical interneuronal networks that generate very high frequency waves
- Source :
- Supplements to Clinical neurophysiology. 56
- Publication Year :
- 2003
-
Abstract
- A remarkable feature of motor cortical organization in higher mammals is that a brief electrical stimulus elicits in the pyramidal tract and corticospinal tract an unrelayed direct (D) wave followed by multiple indirect (I) waves at frequencies as high as 500-700 Hz. This review presents some conclusions regarding very high frequency synchronous activity in mammalian cortex: (1) Synchrony in repetitive I discharges is extraordinary in humans and monkeys, less in cats and still less in rats, being there represented by a delayed broad wave; such phylogenetic trends have important implications for the suitability of lower mammalian species for studies of high frequency cortical networks in the human brain; (2) The evidence from microstimulation at different cortical depths and pial cooling favors a vertically oriented chain of interneurons that centripetally excite corticospinal neurons as the basis for inter-I wave periodicity and synchrony; (3) Significantly, the I wave periodicity is conserved despite wide changes in stimulus parameters; (4) Synchronous high frequency activity similar to that of I waves can be recorded from other neocortical areas such as visual and somatosensory cortex; however, evidence is still lacking that the output neurons of these cortical regions have synchronized discharges comparable to I waves; (5) In limbic cortices, the frequency of synchronous neural activity is lower than that in motor cortex or related cortices and periodicity is not conserved with changes in stimulus parameters, indicating a lack of the neocortical interneuronal substrate in limbic cortex; (6) We propose that the very high frequency synchronous activity of motor cortical output reflects a computational function such as a "clock," quantizing times at which inputs would interact preferentially yielding synchronous output discharges. Such circuitry, if a general feature of neocortex, would facilitate rapid communication of significant computations between cortical regions.
- Subjects :
- Periodicity
Time Factors
Radio Waves
Motor Cortex
Pyramidal Tracts
Dose-Response Relationship, Radiation
Neocortex
In Vitro Techniques
Evoked Potentials, Motor
Hippocampus
Electric Stimulation
Membrane Potentials
Magnetics
Species Specificity
Interneurons
Synapses
Reaction Time
Animals
Humans
Cortical Synchronization
Nerve Net
Sleep
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1567424X
- Volume :
- 56
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Supplements to Clinical neurophysiology
- Accession number :
- edsair.pmid..........52ec3f878634ff3992614c2f8b95f1cc