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1.
Evoked potentials in the auditory cortex of the cat are measured by applying auditory stimulations in the form of tone bursts of 700 Hz. Transient evoked potentials obtained in this way are transformed to the frequency domain using a Laplace Transform. The amplitude frequency characteristic obtained with this semi-empirical method depicts maxima of EEG-amplitude in frequency ranges of 10–13 Hz and 60–80 Hz. The correlation between the time course of evoked potentials and spontaneous activity of the brain and the efficiency of the method used are pointed out.  相似文献   

2.
Averaged evoked potentials in the inferior colliculus (IC), medial geniculate nucleus (MG) and reticular formation (RF) of chronically implanted and freely moving cats were measured using auditory step functions in the form of tone bursts of 2000 Hz. The most prominent components of the AEP of the inferior colliculus were a positive wave of 13 msec and a negative wave of 40–55 msec latency. The AEP of the medial geniculate nucleus was characterized by a large negative wave peaking at 35–40 msec. During spindle sleep and slow wave sleep stages changes in the AEPs of both nuclei occured.Transient evoked responses of the inferior colliculus, medial geniculate nucleus and reticular formation were transformed to the frequency domain using the Laplace transform (one sided Fourier transform) in order to obtain frequency characteristics of the systems under study. The amplitude characteristics of IC, MG. and RF obtained in this way revealed maxima in alpha (8–13 Hz), beta (18–35 Hz) and higher frequency (50–80 Hz) ranges. During spindle sleep stage a maximum in the theta frequency range (3–8 Hz) and during slow wave sleep maximum in the delta (1–3 Hz) frequency range appeared in the amplitude characteristics of these nuclei.The amplitude characteristics of the inferior colliculus and medial geniculate nucleus were compared with the amplitude characteristics of other brain structures. The comparison of AEPs and amplitude frequency characteristics obtained using these AEPs reveals that the existence of a number of peaks (waves) with different latencies in the time course does not necessarily indicate the existence of different functional structures or neural groups giving rise to these waves. The entire time course of evoked potentials and not the number and latencies of the waves, carries, the whole information concerning different activities and frequency selectivities of brain structures.Supported by Turkish Scientific and Technical Research Council Grant TAG-266.Presented in Part at the VIIIth International Congress of Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology in Marseilles, September 1–7, 1973.  相似文献   

3.
Evoked Potentials in the hippocampus dorsalis are measured using chronically implanted and freely moving cats in applying auditory stimulations in the form of tone bursts of 3000 Hz. The hippocampal evoked potentials are characterized by 3 positive (I, III, V) and 3 negative peaks (II, IV, VI). Peaks I to VI have latencies of about 10, 28, 50, 75, 95 and 125 msec. These responses are then analyzed with a Laplace transform in order to obtain the hippocampal frequency characteristics. The amplitude frequency characteristic depicts resonance maxima of EEG-amplitude in theta (3–8 Hz) and beta (18–32 Hz) frequency ranges. A resonance in the frequencies of 3–8 Hz was expected because of the spontaneous hippocampal theta activity. Therefore this finding emphasize the reliability of the mathematical method used. On the other hand the existence of a hippocampal beta selectivity is highly remarkable and apparently the hippocampal activity is regulated at least by two different systems. The use of the mathematical method (Laplace transform) indicates that the simple knowledge of the latencies and the number of potential waves(usuallydenoted as P 1, P 2, ..., N 1, N 2 ...) cannot allow exact statements on mechanisms causing the formation of these peaks. Rather the slope and slope changes of the waves are determining. Different waves in the transient evoked response can be generated from a mechanism having only one resonant maximum in the frequency domain.Supported in part by Turkish Scientific and Technical Research Council Grant No. TAG-182.  相似文献   

4.
The effects of the EEG–biofeedback (EEG–BFB) procedure, aimed at increasing the sensorimotor (12–15 Hz) and (15–18 Hz) rhythms on the psychological and electrophysiological parameters of attention, were studied using the methods of scalp recording of evoked potentials in the bistimulus paradigm Go/No–Go and a psychological attention test (Test of Variables of Attention; TOVA). Twenty-five children with attention disorders were included in the study. EEG–BFB sessions significantly improved the attention, behavior, and school study results in 19 (76%) children. In these cases, a significant increase in the amplitude of the inhibitory component in the frontocentral leads and improvement of the TOVA parameters were found.  相似文献   

5.
In this study, we analyze the important relation between the spontaneous and evoked activities of the substructures of the cat brain, such as the reticular formation, hippocampus, inferior colliculus, medial geniculate nucleus and acoustical cortex, with an ensemble of systems theory methods consisting of the following steps: (1) single auditory and/or visual evoked potentials (EPs) and the spontaneous activities (EEG) just preceding the stimuli are recorded from the brain center under study; (2) selectively averaged evoked potentials (SAEPs) are obtained from the recorded EPs; (3) amplitude frequency characteristics are computed from the AAEPs by means of Fourier transform; (4) the single EEG-EP sweeps are theoretically pass-band filtered with adequate band limits determined according to the selectivities revealed by the amplitude characteristics; (5) the EEG and EP components obtained in this way are compared with regard to the amplification in the population response upon the application of the stimulus. The results of this analysis support quantitatively our prediction of various types of resonance phenomena in a number of nuclei in the cat brain and in a large scale of frequencies from 1 Hz to 1000 Hz and show that the amplification factor related to resonance phenomena has probabilistic nature. Therefore, the analogy which we have recently drawn between the behaviors of a neural population and a random-phase probabilistic harmonic oscillator is extended by assigning also the amplitude and the frequency of the oscillations as random variables. A working hypothesis for the dynamics of neuronal populations is elaborated accordingly.Presented in Part at the Third European Meeting on Cybernetics and Systems Research 1976 in Vienna, April 20–23, 1976Supported by Grant No. TAG-345 of the Scientific and Technical Research Council of Turkey  相似文献   

6.
Summary Up to five microelectrodes inserted through short hypodermic needles in the cranial cartilage of Sepia officinalis recorded potentials while the cuttlefish moved freely in a small enclosure. Compound field potentials and unit spikes were seen during ongoing, spontaneous activity and after sensory stimulation.Ongoing activity resembles that reported for octopus, with maximum power usually below 20 Hz. Amplitude varies greatly but has not been seen to shut off or turn on abruptly and globally as in octopus.Evoked potentials, focally large after flashes of light consist of several waves; the first is largest, positive and peaks at ca. 35 ms (called P35), followed by ca. P75, P95, N110 and smaller waves or oscillations lasting more than 0.5 s. The Upper Following Frequency (highest flashing rate the potentials can follow 1:1), without averaging, is >15 flashes/s (20–22 °C); at 20/s the 11 following lasts for 1 or 2 s. The Lower Fusion Frequency of averaged responses is < 30/s. Gentle tapping of the tank wall evokes local, brief, fast potentials. No responses have been found to loud air-borne clicks and tone bursts with principal energy at 300 Hz or to electric fields in the bath at 50–100 V/cm.In a few loci relatively large slow Omitted Stimulus Potentials have been seen following the end of a train of flashes at more than 5/s; these are by definition event related potentials and a special, central form of OFF response.Abbreviations EP evoked potential - ISI interstimulus interval - OSP omitted stimulus potential - VEP visual evoked potential  相似文献   

7.
The effects of imidazole, guanidine, and theophylline on spontaneous (frequency of miniature end-plate potentials) and evoked (quantum composition of end-plate potentials) transmitter release were compared in isolated sartorius muscles ofRana temporaria at different temperatures and during changes in the calcium concentration in the external solution. All three substances increased the quantum composition of the end-plate potentials and the frequency of the miniature end-plate potentials at 20°C and in 0.5 mM calcium. As regards their effect on the quantum composition the substances could be arranged in the following order: imidazole guanidine theophylline; as regards their effect on frequency: theophylline imidazole guanidine. Theophylline increased spontaneous release, whereas imidazole and guanidine increased evoked transmitter release more than the rest. Comparison of the effect of these substances at 20 and 7°C showed that only the action of theophylline on spontaneous release depends on temperature. The effect of imidazole and theophylline on frequency was independent of the calcium concentration in the medium. Differences in the mechanism of action of these compounds on spontaneous and evoked acetylcholine release are discussed.I. M. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 9, No. 4, pp. 430–436, July–August, 1977.  相似文献   

8.
Isolated outer hair cells (OHCs) and explants ot the organ of Corti were obtained from the cochlea of the echolocating bat, Carollia perspicillata, whose hearing range extends up to about 100 kHz. The OHCs were about 10–30 m long and produced resting potentials between-30 to -69 mV. During stimulation with a sinusoidal extracellular voltage field (voltage gradient of 2 mV/m) cyclic length changes were observed in isolated OHCs. The displacements were most prominent at the level of the cell nucleus and the cuticular plate. In the organ of Corti explants, the extracellular electric field induced a radial movement of the cuticular plate which was observed using video subtraction and photodiode techniques. Maximum displacements of about 0.3–0.8 m were elicited by stimulus frequencies below 100 Hz. The displacement amplitude decreased towards the noise level of about 10–30 nm for stimulus frequencies between 100–500 Hz, both in apical and basal explants. This compares well with data from the guinea pig, where OHC motility induced by extracellular electrical stimulation exhibits a low pass characteristic with a corner frequency below 1 kHz. The data indicate that fast OHC movements presumably are quite small at ultrasonic frequencies and it remains to be solved how they participate in amplifying and sharpening cochlear responses in vivo.Abbreviations BM basilar membrane - FFT fast Fourier Transfer - IHC inner hair cell - OHC outer hair cell  相似文献   

9.
This study is an extension of the experimental research of Nalçac et al., who presented 16 subjects with a reversal of checkerboard pattern as stimuli in the right visual field or left visual field and recorded EEG at O1, O2, P3, and P4. They applied the chosen bandpass filters (4–8, 8–15, 15–20, 20–32 Hz) to the VEPs of subjects and obtained four different components for each VEP. The first aim of this study is to improve the previous report using some methods in time-frequency domain to estimate interhemispheric delays and amplitudes in a time window. Using the improved estimates of interhemispheric delays, the second aim is to estimate the proportion of callosal fibers of different diameters that are activated by visual stimuli by comparing amplitudes of VEPs in different frequency bands. If the relation between frequency components of VEP and delays for callosal fibers of different dimension were reliable, it would give us an opportunity to deal with amplitude of bandpass-filtered VEPs in order to see approximately the proportion of these fibers activated by a certain stimulus. By using frequency-dependent shifts in time and maximizing the cross correlation of direct VEP (DVEP–VEP obtained from contralateral hemisphere)–indirect VEP (IVEP–VEP obtained from ipsilateral hemisphere) pairs in the time-frequency domain, we examined the delay not only at P100 and N160 peaks but along a meaningful time interval as well. Furthermore, by shifting back the IVEP according to the delay estimated at each time window, both the amplitudes and energies of the synchronized DVEP–IVEP pairs were compared at the chosen frequency bands. The percentages of IVEPs at each band was then examined further in conjunction with the distribution of axon diameters in the posterior pole of the CC, questioning the relation between the distributions of the axon diameters and activations at each band. We established an energy definition to express the activation in the fibers. When the energy percentages of IVEPs in theta and alpha were totaled, they were found to be between 76.2% and 81.6%, which is close to the value 74–77% for fibers of 0.4–1 m in diameter obtained from anatomical study of human CC. The sum of energy percentages in the beta1 and beta2 bands was between 20.1% and 24.2%, which probably reflects the proportion of activation of callosal fibers 1–3 m in diameter.  相似文献   

10.
Electrical stimulation of the lumbar cord at distinct frequency ranges has been shown to evoke either rhythmical, step-like movements (25–50 Hz) or a sustained extension (5–15 Hz) of the paralysed lower limbs in complete spinal cord injured subjects. Frequency-dependent activation of previously silent spinal pathways was suggested to contribute to the differential responsiveness to distinct neuronal codes and the modifications in the electromyographic recordings during the actual implementation of the evoked motor tasks. In the present study we examine this suggestion by means of a simplified biology-based neuronal network. Involving two basic mechanisms, temporal summation of synaptic input and presynaptic inhibition, the model exhibits several patterns of mono- and/or oligo-synaptic motor output in response to different interstimulus intervals. It thus reproduces fundamental input–output features of the lumbar cord isolated from the brain. The results confirm frequency-dependent spinal pathway selection as a simple mechanism which enables the cord to respond to distinct neuronal codes with different motor behaviours and to control the actual performance of the latter.  相似文献   

11.
A conditioned defensive reflex to photic stimulation was produced in rabbits in computer-controlled experiments during regular electrical stimulation of the septum. During reflex formation spectral-correlation analysis was undertaken of sensomotor and visual cortical potentials and hippocampal potentials. In each rabbit the reflex to light was produced during septal stimulation at a definite frequency (2, 4, 7, and 9 Hz). Regular electrical stimulation of the septum at frequencies of 7 and 9 Hz accelerated conditioning whereas stimulation at a frequency of 2 Hz prevented formation of the temporary connection (the reflex appeared at the 35th combination). By changing the frequency of electrical stimulation of the septum, the speed of learning can thus be influenced. It is suggested that the role of the septum is to set a definite level of synchronization of brain processes at the optimal value for conduction of excitation from its afferent to its effector system.Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 3, pp. 239–244, May–June, 1978.  相似文献   

12.
In this study, we introduce the fast wavelet transform (WT) as a method for investigating the effects of morphine on the electroencephalogram (EEG), respiratory activity and blood pressure in fetal lambs. Morphine was infused intravenously at 25 mg/h. The EEG, respiratory activity and blood pressure signals were analyzed using WT. We performed wavelet decomposition for five sets of parameters D 2j where -1 < j 5. The five series WTs represent the detail signal bandwidths: 1, 16–32 Hz; 2, 8–16 Hz; 3, 4–8 Hz; 4, 2–4 Hz; 5, 1–2 Hz. Before injection of the high-dose morphine, power in the EEG was high in all six frequency bandwidths. The respiratory and blood pressure signals showed common frequency components with respect to time and were coincident with the low-voltage fast activity (LVFA) EEG signal. Respiratory activity was observed during only some of the LVFA periods, and was completely absent during high-voltage slow activity (HVSA) EEG. The respiratory signal showed dominant power in the fourth wavelet band, and less power in the third and fifth bands. The blood pressure signal was also characterized by dominant power in the fourth wavelet band. This power was significantly increased during periods of respiratory activity. There was a strong relationship between fetal EEG, blood pressure and breathing movements. However, the injection of high-dose morphine resulted in a disruption of the normal cyclic pattern between the two EEG states and a significant increase in power in the first wavelet band. In addition, the high-dose drug resulted in a significant increase in the power of respiratory signal in the fourth and fifth wavelet bands, while power was reduced in the third wavelet band. Breathing activity was also continuous after the drug. The high-dose morphine also caused a temporary power shift from the third wavelet band to the fourth wavelet band for the 30-min period after injection of drug. Finally, high-dose morphine completely destroyed the correlation between EEG, breathing and blood pressure signals.  相似文献   

13.
Synaptic responses (postsynaptic potentials and action potentials) were evoked in mesencephalic decerebellated cats by stimulating pontine bulbar locomotor and inhibitory sites (LS and IS, respectively) with a current of not more than 20 µA in "medial" and "lateral" neurons of the medulla. Some neurons even produced a response to presentation of single (actually low — 2–5 Hz — frequency) stimuli. The remaining cells responded to stimulation at a steady rate of 30–60 Hz only. Both groups of medial neurons were more receptive to input from LS. Lateral neurons responding to even single stimuli reacted more commonly to input from LS and those responding to steady stimulation only to input from IS. Many neurons with background activity (whether lateral or medial) produced no stimulus-bound response, but rhythmic stimulation either intensified or inhibited such activity. This response occurs most commonly with LS stimulation. Partial redistribution of target neurons in step with increasing rate of presynaptic input may play a major part in control of motor activity.Institute for Research into Information Transmission, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 22, No. 2, pp. 257–266, March–April, 1990.  相似文献   

14.
Synchronised activity, differing in phase in different populations of neurons, plays an important role in existing theories on the function of brain oscillations (e.g., temporal correlation hypothesis). A prerequisite for this synchronisation is that stimuli are capable of affecting (resetting) the phase of brain oscillations. Such a change in the phase of brain waves is also assumed to underlie the Berger effect: when observers open their eyes, the amplitude of EEG oscillations in the alpha band (8–13 Hz) decreases significantly. This finding is usually thought to involve a desynchronisation of activity in different neurons. For functional interpretations of brain oscillations in the visual system, it therefore seems to be crucial to find out whether or not the phase of brain oscillations can be affected by visual stimuli. To answer this question, we investigated whether alpha waves are generated by a linear or a nonlinear mechanism. If the mechanism is linear – in contrast to nonlinear ones – phases cannot be reset by a stimulus. It is shown that alpha-wave activity in the EEG comprises both linear and nonlinear components. The generation of alpha waves basically is a linear process and flash-evoked potentials are superimposed on ongoing alpha waves without resetting their phase. One nonlinear component is due to light adaptation, which contributes to the Berger effect. The results call into question theories about brain-wave function based on temporal correlation or event-related desynchronisation.Electronic Supplementary Material: Supplementary material is available for this article at  相似文献   

15.
Summary Potentials evoked by clicks and tone pips were recorded by fine wires inserted extracranially in four West Indian manatees (Trichechus manatus) in air. Sounds were delivered via padded ear phones.Averaging a few thousand trials at 20/s reveals early peaks at N5.4 (vertex negativity to a frontal reference, at 5.4 ms), P7.6, N8.8, P9.5 — probably equivalent to waves IV and VII of the typical mammalian auditory brainstem response (ABR). Averaging 100 trials at <4/s suffices to reveal a complex sequence of later peaks including N25, P80, N150 and P190; consistent smaller peaks are visible when several hundred trials are averaged.Using tone pips with a rise and fall time of 2–5 ms the carrier frequency becomes important. Evoked potential wave forms are not the same at different frequencies, bringing out the fact that frequency is not a scalar that can be compensated for by intensity. Therefore the method was not used to obtain audiograms; however the largest EPs occur in the range of 1–1.5 kHz. EPs are found up to 35 kHz; almost no evoked potential is discernible at 40 kHz but the undistorted intensity available was limited. This is in reasonable agreement with the theoretical expectation for the upper limit of behavioral hearing from Heffner and Masterton based on head size and aquatic medium.Among several ear phone placements, that over the external auditory meatus was the most effective, but only slightly so. The external canal is presumably fluid or tissue filled and sound enters over a large area.Comparing data for two species on the most effective range of frequencies and the power spectra of their vocalizations,T. manatus is lower thanT. inunguis in both respects.The results show the utility and limitations of the method of recording extracranial evoked potentials to sounds, especially for large and valuable animals under makeshift conditions.Abbreviations ABR auditory brainstem response - AEP averaged evoked potentials - EMG electromyogram - F frontal sinuses - V vertex  相似文献   

16.
Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) evoked by near-threshold stimulation of the radial layer were recorded from the CA1 area of guinea pig hippocampal slices. An optimization method based on the deconvolution technique was used to reconstruct a noise-free discrete distribution of the amplitudes with regular (quantal) intervals (v) between the discrete components. The standard deviation of v (Sv) was studied for its effect on the estimate of the v value. Twenty-two amplitude distributions with approximately regular, visually distinguishable peaks were analyzed. It was found that, in some cases, too small (<0.1–0.15 v) or too large (>0.3–0.4 v) Sv led to lower v estimates in comparison with those obtained for Sv in the range of 0.1–0.3 v. Computer experiments have shown that too small or too large Sv values may lead to underestimates of the stimulated v values. The average underestimate for physiological data is probably 10–15%, but, in some cases, it may be higher. Judging from a maximal verisimilitude criterion, optimal v estimates are obtained for Sv between 0 and 0.15 v. Comparison of simulated and physiological data suggests that the variation coefficient of v for hippocampal synapses formed by radial fibers on CA1 neurons is equal to 0.1–0.2 Sv values generally accepted for the deconvolution procedure (0 or 0.05 v) seem to be underestimated for central synapses, while Sv>0.3 v are overestimated. Underestimates of Sv known from literature may be due to a dependence of the deconvolution procedure results on the noise level, as well as due to a probable nonlinear interaction between the signal and noise. Overestimates may be a result of multiple spontaneous quantal release.Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 25, No. 1, pp. 10–17, January–February, 1993.  相似文献   

17.
Summary Cupiennius salei (Ctenidae) is a tropical wandering spider which lives in close association with a particular type of plant (see companion paper). These plants are the channels through which the spiders receive and emit various types of vibrations. We measured the vibrations the spiders are typically exposed to when they sit on their dwelling plants (banana plant, bromeliad) in their natural biotope in Central America. In addition a laboratory analysis was carried out to get an approximate idea of the complex vibration-propagating properties of the dwelling plants, taking a banana plant as an example. (1) Types of vibrations (Figs. 1–4). Despite variability in detail there are characteristic differences in spectral composition between the vibrations of various abiotic and biotic origins: (a) Vibrations due to wind are very low frequency phenomena. Their frequency spectra are conspicuously narrow with prominent peaks close to or, more often, below 10 Hz. Vibrations due to raindrops show maximal acceleration values at ca. 1000 Hz. Their frequency band at-20 dB extends up to ca. 250 Hz where-as that of the vibrations due to wind extends to only ca. 50 Hz. (b) The frequency spectra of prey vibrations such as those generated by a running cockroach are typically broad-banded and contain high frequencies; they have largest peaks mostly between ca. 400 and 900 Hz. Their-20 dB frequency bands usually extend from a few Hz to ca. 900 Hz. Some potential prey animals such as grass-hoppers seem to be vibrocryptic; they walk by the spider as if unnoticed. Their cautious gait leads to only weak vibrations at very low frequencies resembling the background noise due to wind. Courtship signals are composed maily of low frequencies, intermediate between background noise and prey vibrations (male: prominent peaks at ca. 75 Hz and ca. 115 Hz; female: dominant frequencies between ca. 20 Hz and ca. 50 Hz). The male signal is composed of syllables and differs from all other vibrations studied here by being temporally highly ordered. A comparison with previous electrophysiological studies suggests that the high pass characteristics of the vibration receptors enhance the signal-to-(abiotic)-noise ratio and that the vibration-sensitive interneurons so far examined and found to have band pass characteristics are tuned to the frequencies found in the vibrations of biotic origin. (2) Signal propagation (Fig. 5). In terms of frequency-dependent attenuation of vibrations the banana plant is well suited for transmitting the above signals. Average attenuation values are ca. 0.35 dB/cm. Together with known data on vibration receptor sensitivity this explains the range of courtship signals of more than 1 m observed in behavioral studies. Attenuation in the plant is neither a monotonic function of frequency nor of distance from the signal source.  相似文献   

18.

Background

EEG studies of working memory (WM) have demonstrated load dependent frequency band modulations. FMRI studies have localized load modulated activity to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), medial prefrontal cortex (MPFC), and posterior parietal cortex (PPC). Recently, an EEG-fMRI study found that low frequency band (theta and alpha) activity negatively correlated with the BOLD signal during the retention phase of a WM task. However, the coupling of higher (beta and gamma) frequencies with the BOLD signal during WM is unknown.

Methodology

In 16 healthy adult subjects, we first investigated EEG-BOLD signal correlations for theta (5–7 Hz), alpha1 (8–10), alpha2 (10–12 Hz), beta1 (13–20), beta2 (20–30 Hz), and gamma (30–40 Hz) during the retention period of a WM task with set size 2 and 5. Secondly, we investigated whether load sensitive brain regions are characterised by effects that relate frequency bands to BOLD signals effects.

Principal Findings

We found negative theta-BOLD signal correlations in the MPFC, PPC, and cingulate cortex (ACC and PCC). For alpha1 positive correlations with the BOLD signal were found in ACC, MPFC, and PCC; negative correlations were observed in DLPFC, PPC, and inferior frontal gyrus (IFG). Negative alpha2-BOLD signal correlations were observed in parieto-occipital regions. Beta1-BOLD signal correlations were positive in ACC and negative in precentral and superior temporal gyrus. Beta2 and gamma showed only positive correlations with BOLD, e.g., in DLPFC, MPFC (gamma) and IFG (beta2/gamma). The load analysis revealed that theta and—with one exception—beta and gamma demonstrated exclusively positive load effects, while alpha1 showed only negative effects.

Conclusions

We conclude that the directions of EEG-BOLD signal correlations vary across brain regions and EEG frequency bands. In addition, some brain regions show both load sensitive BOLD and frequency band effects. Our data indicate that lower as well as higher frequency brain oscillations are linked to neurovascular processes during WM.  相似文献   

19.
Bragin  A. G.  Vinogradova  O. S. 《Neurophysiology》1985,17(2):102-108
Embryonic septal and hippocampal tissue was transplanted into a cavity formed by removal of part of the parietal cortex of adult rats by suction. By extracellular recording 4–6 months after the operation cells with spontaneous activity with a frequency of 3.6±0.4 Hz, characterized by an irregular, stochastic spike distribution, were detected in the graft. About 90% of cells responded to electrical stimulation of neighboring cortical areas after a latent period of 5–43 msec. The most stable responses appeared to stimulation with frequencies of 5–10 Hz; in most cases the evoked discharge was followed by a period of inhibition of spontaneous activity (100–700 msec). The same number of cells responded to tactile stimulation of the body surface and vibrissae of the recipient animal. Specific responses of different types with latent periods of between 50 and 600 msec were observed. Normalization of unit activity of intracerebral grafts compared with activity of cells in tissue developing in the anterior chamber of the eye, and their functional integration with the recipient's brain are discussed.Institute of Biological Physics, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Pushchino-on-Oka. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 17, No. 2, pp. 160–168, March–April, 1985.  相似文献   

20.
Summary Information processing in the mushroom bodies which are an important part of most invertebrate central nervous systems was analysed by extracellular electrophysiological techniques. The mushroom bodies consist of layers of parallel intrinsic neurons which make synaptic contact with extrinsic input and output neurons. The intrinsic neurons (approximately 170,000/mushroom body) have very small axon diameters (0.1–1 m) which makes it difficult to record their activity intracellularly. In order to analyse the functional properties of this neuropil field potentials were measured extracellularly.Series of averaged evoked potentials (AEPs) were recorded along electrode tracks at consecutive depth intervals in different parts of the mushroom bodies of the bee. These potentials were elicited by olfactory, mechanical and visual stimuli.In order to locate the synaptic areas generating these potentials, current source-densities (CSD) were calculated using the consecutively measured evoked potentials. The conductivities of the extracellular space along the electrode tracks in the pedunculus and calyx and in part of the alpha-lobe of the mushroom bodies were found to be constant.The CSD analysis reveals a complex pattern of source-sink distributions in the mushroom bodies. There is a high degree of correlation between current sinks and sources detected by CSD analysis and the morphological distribution of neurons.The CSD analysis shows that the inputs and outputs of the mushroom bodies involve multimodal synaptic interactions, whereas information processing in the intrinsic Kenyon-cells is limited to sensory inputs from the antenna.Comparison of the electrophysiological with the histological results shows that the intrinsic cells of the mushroom bodies are physiologically not a homogeneous group as is often proposed. Among the intrinsic neurons clearly defined areas of current sources and sinks can be identified and attributed to Kenyon-cells in different layers.Abbreviations AEP averaged evoked potentials - AGT antennoglomerular tract - CSD current source-density - PCT antennoglomerular tract  相似文献   

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