Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, Radboud University, 6525 EN, Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, Radboud University, 6525 EN, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
eNeuro. 2022 Sep 15;9(5). doi: 10.1523/ENEURO.0489-21.2022. Print 2022 Sep-Oct.
Neural oscillations are thought to reflect low-level operations that can be used for higher-level cognitive functions. Here, we investigated the role of brain rhythms in the 1-30 Hz range by recording MEG in human participants performing a visual delayed match-to-sample paradigm in which orientation or spatial frequency of sample and probe gratings had to be matched. A cue occurring before or after sample presentation indicated the to-be-matched feature. We demonstrate that alpha/beta power decrease tracks the presentation of the informative cue and indexes faster responses. Moreover, these faster responses coincided with an augmented phase alignment of slow oscillations, as well as phase-amplitude coupling between slow and fast oscillations. Importantly, stimulus decodability was boosted by both low alpha power and high beta power. In summary, we provide support for a comprehensive framework in which different rhythms play specific roles: slow rhythms control input sampling, while alpha (and beta) gates the information flow, beta recruits task-relevant circuits, and the timing of faster oscillations is controlled by slower ones.
神经振荡被认为反映了可以用于更高层次认知功能的低水平操作。在这里,我们通过在人类参与者中记录 MEG 来研究 1-30Hz 范围内的脑节律的作用,参与者在其中执行视觉延迟匹配样本范式,其中样本和探针光栅的方向或空间频率必须匹配。在样本呈现之前或之后出现的提示指示要匹配的特征。我们证明,alpha/beta 功率下降跟踪信息提示的呈现,并指示更快的响应。此外,这些更快的响应与慢振荡的相位对准增强以及慢振荡和快振荡之间的相位-幅度耦合相一致。重要的是,刺激的可解码性既受到低 alpha 功率又受到高 beta 功率的提升。总之,我们为一个综合框架提供了支持,其中不同的节律发挥特定的作用:慢节律控制输入采样,而 alpha(和 beta)则控制信息流,beta 招募与任务相关的电路,更快的振荡的定时由较慢的振荡控制。