Literature DB >> 32719161

Temporal Signatures of Criticality in Human Cortical Excitability as Probed by Early Somatosensory Responses.

Tilman Stephani1,2, Gunnar Waterstraat3, Stefan Haufe4, Gabriel Curio3,5, Arno Villringer6,7,8, Vadim V Nikulin1,5,9.   

Abstract

Brain responses vary considerably from moment to moment, even to identical sensory stimuli. This has been attributed to changes in instantaneous neuronal states determining the system's excitability. Yet the spatiotemporal organization of these dynamics remains poorly understood. Here we test whether variability in stimulus-evoked activity can be interpreted within the framework of criticality, which postulates dynamics of neural systems to be tuned toward the phase transition between stability and instability as is reflected in scale-free fluctuations in spontaneous neural activity. Using a novel noninvasive approach in 33 male human participants, we tracked instantaneous cortical excitability by inferring the magnitude of excitatory postsynaptic currents from the N20 component of the somatosensory evoked potential. Fluctuations of cortical excitability demonstrated long-range temporal dependencies decaying according to a power law across trials, a hallmark of systems at critical states. As these dynamics covaried with changes in prestimulus oscillatory activity in the alpha band (8-13 Hz), we establish a mechanistic link between ongoing and evoked activity through cortical excitability and argue that the co-emergence of common temporal power laws may indeed originate from neural networks poised close to a critical state. In contrast, no signatures of criticality were found in subcortical or peripheral nerve activity. Thus, criticality may represent a parsimonious organizing principle of variability in stimulus-related brain processes on a cortical level, possibly reflecting a delicate equilibrium between robustness and flexibility of neural responses to external stimuli.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Variability of neural responses in primary sensory areas is puzzling, as it is detrimental to the exact mapping between stimulus features and neural activity. However, such variability can be beneficial for information processing in neural networks if it is of a specific nature, namely, if dynamics are poised at a so-called critical state characterized by a scale-free spatiotemporal structure. Here, we demonstrate the existence of a link between signatures of criticality in ongoing and evoked activity through cortical excitability, which fills the long-standing gap between two major directions of research on neural variability: the impact of instantaneous brain states on stimulus processing on the one hand and the scale-free organization of spatiotemporal network dynamics of spontaneous activity on the other.
Copyright © 2020 the authors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  EEG; complexity; criticality; excitability; oscillations; somatosensory

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32719161      PMCID: PMC7486660          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0241-20.2020

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  63 in total

1.  Long-range temporal correlations and scaling behavior in human brain oscillations.

Authors:  K Linkenkaer-Hansen; V V Nikouline; J M Palva; R J Ilmoniemi
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2001-02-15       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Long-range temporal correlations in alpha and beta oscillations: effect of arousal level and test-retest reliability.

Authors:  Vadim V Nikulin; Tom Brismar
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2004-08       Impact factor: 3.708

3.  A common formalism for the integral formulations of the forward EEG problem.

Authors:  Jan Kybic; Maureen Clerc; Toufic Abboud; Olivier Faugeras; Renaud Keriven; Théo Papadopoulo
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2005-01       Impact factor: 10.048

4.  Spontaneous locally restricted EEG alpha activity determines cortical excitability in the motor cortex.

Authors:  P Sauseng; W Klimesch; C Gerloff; F C Hummel
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2008-08-03       Impact factor: 3.139

Review 5.  Neural variability: friend or foe?

Authors:  Ilan Dinstein; David J Heeger; Marlene Behrmann
Journal:  Trends Cogn Sci       Date:  2015-05-12       Impact factor: 20.229

6.  Enhancement of visual evoked potentials by stimulation during low prestimulus EEG stages.

Authors:  E Rahn; E Başar
Journal:  Int J Neurosci       Date:  1993-09       Impact factor: 2.292

Review 7.  Moment-to-moment brain signal variability: a next frontier in human brain mapping?

Authors:  Douglas D Garrett; Gregory R Samanez-Larkin; Stuart W S MacDonald; Ulman Lindenberger; Anthony R McIntosh; Cheryl L Grady
Journal:  Neurosci Biobehav Rev       Date:  2013-03-01       Impact factor: 8.989

8.  Real-time EEG-defined excitability states determine efficacy of TMS-induced plasticity in human motor cortex.

Authors:  Christoph Zrenner; Debora Desideri; Paolo Belardinelli; Ulf Ziemann
Journal:  Brain Stimul       Date:  2017-11-24       Impact factor: 8.955

9.  Stimulus onset quenches neural variability: a widespread cortical phenomenon.

Authors:  Mark M Churchland; Byron M Yu; John P Cunningham; Leo P Sugrue; Marlene R Cohen; Greg S Corrado; William T Newsome; Andrew M Clark; Paymon Hosseini; Benjamin B Scott; David C Bradley; Matthew A Smith; Adam Kohn; J Anthony Movshon; Katherine M Armstrong; Tirin Moore; Steve W Chang; Lawrence H Snyder; Stephen G Lisberger; Nicholas J Priebe; Ian M Finn; David Ferster; Stephen I Ryu; Gopal Santhanam; Maneesh Sahani; Krishna V Shenoy
Journal:  Nat Neurosci       Date:  2010-02-21       Impact factor: 24.884

10.  Whole-Brain Neuronal Activity Displays Crackling Noise Dynamics.

Authors:  Adrián Ponce-Alvarez; Adrien Jouary; Martin Privat; Gustavo Deco; Germán Sumbre
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2018-11-16       Impact factor: 17.173

View more
  4 in total

1.  Non-zero mean alpha oscillations revealed with computational model and empirical data.

Authors:  Alina A Studenova; Arno Villringer; Vadim V Nikulin
Journal:  PLoS Comput Biol       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 4.779

2.  Separating Neural Oscillations from Aperiodic 1/f Activity: Challenges and Recommendations.

Authors:  Moritz Gerster; Gunnar Waterstraat; Vladimir Litvak; Klaus Lehnertz; Alfons Schnitzler; Esther Florin; Gabriel Curio; Vadim Nikulin
Journal:  Neuroinformatics       Date:  2022-04-07

3.  Neural excitability and sensory input determine intensity perception with opposing directions in initial cortical responses.

Authors:  Tilman Stephani; Alice Hodapp; Mina Jamshidi Idaji; Arno Villringer; Vadim V Nikulin
Journal:  Elife       Date:  2021-10-05       Impact factor: 8.140

4.  Genetic polymorphisms in COMT and BDNF influence synchronization dynamics of human neuronal oscillations.

Authors:  Jaana Simola; Felix Siebenhühner; Vladislav Myrov; Katri Kantojärvi; Tiina Paunio; J Matias Palva; Elvira Brattico; Satu Palva
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2022-08-18
  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.