National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA; Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, University of California-Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California 90095.
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA; Neuroscience Institute, New York University Langone Medical Center, New York, NY 10016, USA.
eNeuro. 2016 Oct 24;3(5). doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0191-16.2016. eCollection 2016 Sep-Oct.
Neural activity recorded at multiple spatiotemporal scales is dominated by arrhythmic fluctuations without a characteristic temporal periodicity. Such activity often exhibits a 1/-type power spectrum, in which power falls off with increasing frequency following a power-law function: [Formula: see text], which is indicative of scale-free dynamics. Two extensively studied forms of scale-free neural dynamics in the human brain are slow cortical potentials (SCPs)-the low-frequency (<5 Hz) component of brain field potentials-and the amplitude fluctuations of α oscillations, both of which have been shown to carry important functional roles. In addition, scale-free dynamics characterize normal human physiology such as heartbeat dynamics. However, the exact relationships among these scale-free neural and physiological dynamics remain unclear. We recorded simultaneous magnetoencephalography and electrocardiography in healthy subjects in the resting state and while performing a discrimination task on scale-free dynamical auditory stimuli that followed different scale-free statistics. We observed that long-range temporal correlation (captured by the power-law exponent β) in SCPs positively correlated with that of heartbeat dynamics across time within an individual and negatively correlated with that of α-amplitude fluctuations across individuals. In addition, across individuals, long-range temporal correlation of both SCP and α-oscillation amplitude predicted subjects' discrimination performance in the auditory task, albeit through antagonistic relationships. These findings reveal interrelations among different scale-free neural and physiological dynamics and initial evidence for the involvement of scale-free neural dynamics in the processing of natural stimuli, which often exhibit scale-free dynamics.
在多个时空尺度上记录到的神经活动主要由无特征时间周期性的非节律性波动主导。这种活动通常表现出 1/- 型功率谱,其中功率随频率增加而按幂律函数衰减:[公式:见正文],这表明存在无标度动力学。人类大脑中两种广泛研究的无标度神经动力学形式是慢皮层电位(SCPs)-脑场电位的低频(<5 Hz)成分-和α 振荡的幅度波动,两者都被证明具有重要的功能作用。此外,无标度动力学还描述了正常的人体生理,如心跳动力学。然而,这些无标度神经和生理动力学之间的确切关系仍不清楚。我们在健康受试者处于静息状态和执行基于无标度动力学听觉刺激的辨别任务时同时记录了脑磁图和心电图,这些听觉刺激遵循不同的无标度统计规律。我们观察到,SCP 中的长程时间相关性(由幂律指数 β 捕获)与个体内部心跳动力学的长程时间相关性呈正相关,与个体之间的α 幅度波动的长程时间相关性呈负相关。此外,在个体之间,SCP 和α 振荡幅度的长程时间相关性均可以预测受试者在听觉任务中的辨别性能,尽管通过拮抗关系。这些发现揭示了不同无标度神经和生理动力学之间的相互关系,并初步证明了无标度神经动力学在处理具有无标度动力学的自然刺激中的参与。