Literature DB >> 16310379

Timing of early activity in the visual cortex as revealed by simultaneous MEG and ERG recordings.

Koji Inui1, Hiromi Sannan, Kensaku Miki, Yoshiki Kaneoke, Ryusuke Kakigi.   

Abstract

To clarify the latency of the earliest cortical activity in visual processing, electroretinograms (ERGs) and visual evoked magnetic fields (VEFs) following flash stimulation were recorded simultaneously in six human subjects. Flash stimuli were applied to the right eye and ERGs were recorded from a skin electrode placed on the lower lid. ERGs showed two major deflections in all subjects: an eyelid-negativity around 20 ms and a positivity around 60 ms corresponding to an a- and b-waves, respectively. The mean onset and peak latency of the earliest component of VEFs (37 M) was 30.2 and 36.9 ms, respectively. There was a linear correlation between the peak latency of the a-wave and the onset latency of the 37 M (r=0.90, P=0.011). When a single equivalent current dipole analysis was applied to the 37 M, four out of six subjects showed highly reliable results. The generator of the 37 M was estimated to be located in the striate cortex in all four subjects. Since post-receptoral activities in the retina are expected to start around the peak of the a-wave (20 ms), the early cortical activity, which appears 10 ms later than the a-wave peak, is considered to be the earliest cortical activity following flash stimulation.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 16310379     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2005.09.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  10 in total

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3.  Repeated practice of a Go/NoGo visuomotor task induces neuroplastic change in the human posterior parietal cortex: an MEG study.

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6.  Human posterior parietal cortex responds to visual stimuli as early as peristriate occipital cortex.

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8.  Parallel processing of face and house stimuli by V1 and specialized visual areas: a magnetoencephalographic (MEG) study.

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9.  Noninvasive spatiotemporal imaging of neural transmission in the subcortical visual pathway.

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10.  A transition from unimodal to multimodal activations in four sensory modalities in humans: an electrophysiological study.

Authors:  Emi Tanaka; Koji Inui; Tetsuo Kida; Takahiro Miyazaki; Yasuyuki Takeshima; Ryusuke Kakigi
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  10 in total

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