| Literature DB >> 24009562 |
Kari L Hoffman1, Michelle C Dragan, Timothy K Leonard, Cristiano Micheli, Rodrigo Montefusco-Siegmund, Taufik A Valiante.
Abstract
Visual exploration in primates depends on saccadic eye movements (SEMs) that cause alternations of neural suppression and enhancement. This modulation extends beyond retinotopic areas, and is thought to facilitate perception; yet saccades may also influence brain regions critical for forming memories of these exploratory episodes. The hippocampus, for example, shows oscillatory activity that is generally associated with encoding of information. Whether or how hippocampal oscillations are influenced by eye movements is unknown. We recorded the neural activity in the human and macaque hippocampus during visual scene search. Across species, SEMs were associated with a time-limited alignment of a low-frequency (3-8 Hz) rhythm. The phase alignment depended on the task and not only on eye movements per se, and the frequency band was not a direct consequence of saccade rate. Hippocampal theta-frequency oscillations are produced by other mammals during repetitive exploratory behaviors, including whisking, sniffing, echolocation, and locomotion. The present results may reflect a similar yet distinct primate homologue supporting active perception during exploration.Entities:
Keywords: electrocorticography; epilepsy; foraging; human; macaque; phase-locking; saccades; theta
Year: 2013 PMID: 24009562 PMCID: PMC3757337 DOI: 10.3389/fnsys.2013.00043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Syst Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5137
Subject and electrode recording details.
| P1 | F | L Hipp | 2 | 2 | 3 | 5287 | 36.4 | 7.5 | |
| P2 | F | L Hipp | 0 | 1 | 0 | 9795 | 44.3 | 8.0 | |
| P3 | M | L+R Hipp | 1 | 2 | 6960 | 38.4 | 8.3 | ||
| P4 | M | R TL | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 8388 | 32.6 | 9.5 |
| P5 | M | L Hipp | 0 | 2 | 0 | 6970 | 33.2 | 10.3 | |
| P6 | F | OFC | 0 | 1 | N/A | N/A | 1118 | 10.2 | 7.1 |
| MM1 | F | N/A | 0 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 10–27k | 56.7 | 8.2 |
For each participant, the sex, epileptogenic zone, number of recordings sites for a given location, number of saccades, median number of saccades per trial, and fast Fourier transform (FFT) trial-averaged theta peak is shown. The number of saccades for M1 varied by recording site (var). Abbreviations are: P, patient; MM, macaca mulatta, F, female; M, male; L, left; R, right; Hipp, hippocampus; OFC, orbitofrontal cortex; TL, temporal lobe neocortex; TP, temporal pole. Underlined numbers indicate post-experiment seizure activity in that hippocampus.
Patient 6 ran a control task; data were analyzed separately, see Materials and Methods.
Figure 4Phase-alignment to fixations during search shows specificity in frequency and time. (A) Single-subject theta-band phase-locking to fixations. Shown is the pairwise phase consistency (PPC) for each time-frequency bin described in Figure 3, with time on the x axis relative to fixation onset and frequency on the y-axis. Significant PPC values are unmasked (p < 0.001 of fixation-time-shuffled distribution and Rayleigh test p < 0.001 FDR corrected). (B) Group-averaged PPC plots for each hippocampus sampled. Conventions are as in (A), but for the mean PPC values, with no masking. (C) Frequency band-limited hippocampal phase alignment to fixations, across subjects. For each frequency indicated on the x axis, the y-axis shows the mean PPC value from time-frequency points centered −50 to 250 ms from fixation onset, expressed as the proportion of the maximal PPC value of that sample from 3 to 80 Hz and −800 to 800 ms. Each thin line reflects the normalized PPC from a single hippocampus, with significant frequency bands indicated with a thickened gray line; all hippocampi produced significant phase concentration within a 3–8 Hz band; none produced significant phase concentration above 12 Hz. The black bold line is the group-averaged mean (N = 9). (D) Peri-fixational phase alignment, group averages pre and peri-fixation. Average PPC values from time bins centered −50 to 250 ms from fixation onset were compared with PPC values −800 to −600 ms prior to each fixation. *p < 0.01, Wilcoxon signed rank test. (E) Bars reflect the PPC values from each hippocampus recorded, indexed as the difference between the pre- and peri-fixational time windows (see Materials and Methods). Participant number and hemisphere are indicated below each bar.
Figure 2Localization of electrodes and evoked responses. (A) Renderings from patient 1's MR images with co-localized recording sites. On the left are two coronal sections showing the location of hippocampal depth macroelectrodes, with the most eccentric 1–2 contacts localized to the hippocampus, indicated by the blue dashes. On the right is a rendering of the whole brain, with the anterior tip oriented up and to the right, revealing the locations of subdural surface electrodes. This was the most common arrangement for the patients in this study. (B) Average evoked responses from several electrode locations, aligned to fixation onset. Time is on the x-axis, relative to fixation onset and magnitude in microvolts is on the Y axis. Time points of significant deviations are indicated by the lines at the bottom of the plot, color coded for the corresponding site (p < 0.001 cutoff of the fixation-time shuffled distribution). Note that the post-fixation response is qualitatively strongest in the hippocampus, and shows a polarity reversal across RHD sites; other locations such as the anterior temporal lobe show transient, broad-band modulation around the saccade event. For more information of the electrode locations sampled across subjects, see Table 1.
Figure 3Time-frequency spectrogram of hippocampal activity aligned to fixation onset during visual search, grand averaged across each patient. Frequency was measured from 3 to 80 Hz at 1 Hz intervals, time was measured in 800 ms Hanning-tapered windows, shifted every 10 ms. For visualization of each frequency band, power is presented in each band relative to the average seen for that frequency band between ±800 ms around fixation onset. None of the hippocampal recording sites showed theta power modulation, though some exhibited modulation in higher frequency bands.
Figure 5Three to eight hertz phase alignment depends on visual search but not on matched-rate (3–6 Hz) saccades. Left columns show full data and right columns the control condition. Significant PPC values are unmasked (p < 0.001 of fixation-time-shuffled distribution and Rayleigh test p < 0.001 FDR corrected). (A) PPC from a single hippocampal recording site in a patient. (B) PPC from the same site, excluding all but fixations lasting >500 ms both before and after the fixation onset of interest. (C) Average PPC from Patient 6 during search in the constant-stimulus version task. (D) Average PPC from the same sites, but for fixations made on the dark screen during the inter-trial intervals. (E) Average PPC from the macaque hippocampus aligned to fixations occurring during the main-task trials, and the inter-trial interval on a black screen (F).
Figure 1Saccadic eye movements during visual search. (A) Gaze during one example trial from patient 2. The sequence of gaze locations is shown in purple. The target from this trial was a wind chime, which has been outlined with a yellow dashed rectangle for visibility in this figure. The patient spent the full 45 s searching for the target. (B) Gaze during the same trial viewed by a macaque. Conventions are as in (A), and the macaque also did not find the target on this trial. (C–H) Normalized histogram of fixation durations during the search task for each of the six participants in the main task, respectively. Median search times are listed and indicated with a vertical red line.