Brett L Foster1, Josef Parvizi1. 1. From the Laboratory of Behavioral and Cognitive Neuroscience (B.L.F., J.P.), Stanford Human Intracranial Cognitive Electrophysiology Program, Stanford University, CA; and Departments of Neurosurgery and Neuroscience (B.L.F.), Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX. bfoster@bcm.edu parvizi@stanford.edu.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The posteromedial cortex (PMC) is a collective term for an anatomically heterogeneous area of the brain constituting a core node of the human default mode network (DMN), which is engaged during internally focused subjective cognition such as autobiographical memory. METHODS: We explored the effects of causal perturbations of PMC with direct electric brain stimulation (EBS) during presurgical epilepsy monitoring with intracranial EEG electrodes. RESULTS: Data were collected from 885 stimulations in 25 patients implanted with intracranial electrodes across the PMC. While EBS of regions immediately dorsal or ventral to the PMC reliably produced somatomotor or visual effects, respectively, we found no observable behavioral or subjectively reported effects when sites within the boundaries of PMC were electrically perturbed. In each patient, null effects of PMC stimulation were observed for sites in which intracranial recordings had clearly demonstrated electrophysiologic responses during autobiographical recall. CONCLUSIONS: Direct electric modulation of the human PMC produced null effects when standard functional mapping methods were used. More sophisticated stimulation paradigms (e.g., EBS during experimental cognitive tests) will be required for testing the causal contribution of PMC to human cognition and subjective experience. Nonetheless, our findings suggest that some extant theories of PMC and DMN contribution to human awareness and subjective conscious states require cautious re-examination.
BACKGROUND: The posteromedial cortex (PMC) is a collective term for an anatomically heterogeneous area of the brain constituting a core node of the human default mode network (DMN), which is engaged during internally focused subjective cognition such as autobiographical memory. METHODS: We explored the effects of causal perturbations of PMC with direct electric brain stimulation (EBS) during presurgical epilepsy monitoring with intracranial EEG electrodes. RESULTS: Data were collected from 885 stimulations in 25 patients implanted with intracranial electrodes across the PMC. While EBS of regions immediately dorsal or ventral to the PMC reliably produced somatomotor or visual effects, respectively, we found no observable behavioral or subjectively reported effects when sites within the boundaries of PMC were electrically perturbed. In each patient, null effects of PMC stimulation were observed for sites in which intracranial recordings had clearly demonstrated electrophysiologic responses during autobiographical recall. CONCLUSIONS: Direct electric modulation of the human PMC produced null effects when standard functional mapping methods were used. More sophisticated stimulation paradigms (e.g., EBS during experimental cognitive tests) will be required for testing the causal contribution of PMC to human cognition and subjective experience. Nonetheless, our findings suggest that some extant theories of PMC and DMN contribution to human awareness and subjective conscious states require cautious re-examination.
Authors: Vinitha Rangarajan; Dora Hermes; Brett L Foster; Kevin S Weiner; Corentin Jacques; Kalanit Grill-Spector; Josef Parvizi Journal: J Neurosci Date: 2014-09-17 Impact factor: 6.167
Authors: Yujing Wang; Matthew S Fifer; Adeen Flinker; Anna Korzeniewska; Mackenzie C Cervenka; William S Anderson; Dana F Boatman-Reich; Nathan E Crone Journal: Neurology Date: 2016-03-02 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Kieran C R Fox; Jennifer Yih; Omri Raccah; Shrita L Pendekanti; Lauren E Limbach; Daniella D Maydan; Josef Parvizi Journal: Neurology Date: 2018-09-19 Impact factor: 9.910
Authors: Kieran C R Fox; Lin Shi; Sori Baek; Omri Raccah; Brett L Foster; Srijani Saha; Daniel S Margulies; Aaron Kucyi; Josef Parvizi Journal: Nat Hum Behav Date: 2020-07-06
Authors: Sam Vesuna; Isaac V Kauvar; Ethan Richman; Felicity Gore; Tomiko Oskotsky; Clara Sava-Segal; Liqun Luo; Robert C Malenka; Jaimie M Henderson; Paul Nuyujukian; Josef Parvizi; Karl Deisseroth Journal: Nature Date: 2020-09-16 Impact factor: 69.504