Huang Harvey, Kay Kendrick N, Gregg Nicholas M, Valencia Gabriela Ojeda, In Myung-Ho, Kapeller Christoph, Shu Yunhong, Worrell Gregory A, Miller Kai J, Hermes Dora
Mayo Clinic Medical Scientist Training Program, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN.
Center for Magnetic Resonance Research, Department of Radiology, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
bioRxiv. 2025 May 10:2025.05.05.652264. doi: 10.1101/2025.05.05.652264.
Electrical stimulation is increasingly used to modulate brain networks for clinical purposes. The basic unit of neurostimulation, a single electrical pulse, can travel through white matter to influence connected neuronal populations. However, the mechanisms by which it influences connected populations is not well understood: stimulation may excite, inhibit, or add noise to neuronal population activity. In this study, we investigated how single pulses modulate the neuronal processing of images in a well-controlled visual paradigm. In two human subjects implanted with iEEG electrodes for clinical purposes, single pulses were delivered to electrodes in white matter tracts connected to measurement electrodes in visual cortex. Images appeared on-screen at 0, 100, or 200 ms after each pulse. Using finite impulse response modeling, we decomposed the broadband and evoked potential responses into separate components induced by electrical stimulation and by visual processing. Single pulses induced transient broadband increases followed by suppression, but they did not modulate the visual broadband responses (i.e., stimulation response was additive to visual response). In contrast, single pulses elicited prominent brain stimulation evoked potentials they modulated the visual evoked potentials. Specifically, visual evoked potentials were larger when stimulation occurred closer to visual onset. This indicates that a single electrical pulse can increase the strength or synchrony of visual inputs. Overall, these findings suggest that the effects of electrical stimulation in the visual system are two-fold: stimulation induces additive effects on broadband power, possibly by adding noise, and it interacts with synchronous visual inputs to amplify them.
电刺激越来越多地被用于调节脑网络以达到临床目的。神经刺激的基本单位,即单个电脉冲,可以通过白质传播以影响相连的神经元群体。然而,其影响相连群体的机制尚未完全清楚:刺激可能会兴奋、抑制神经元群体活动或给其增加噪声。在本研究中,我们在一个严格控制的视觉范式中研究了单个脉冲如何调节图像的神经元处理过程。在两名因临床目的植入颅内脑电图(iEEG)电极的人类受试者中,将单个脉冲施加到与视觉皮层中的测量电极相连的白质束中的电极上。在每个脉冲后0、100或200毫秒,图像出现在屏幕上。使用有限脉冲响应建模,我们将宽带和诱发电位响应分解为由电刺激和视觉处理诱导的单独成分。单个脉冲引起短暂的宽带增加,随后是抑制,但它们并未调节视觉宽带响应(即刺激响应与视觉响应相加)。相比之下,单个脉冲引发了显著的脑刺激诱发电位——它们调节了视觉诱发电位。具体而言,当刺激发生在更接近视觉开始时,视觉诱发电位更大。这表明单个电脉冲可以增加视觉输入的强度或同步性。总体而言,这些发现表明电刺激在视觉系统中的作用是双重的:刺激可能通过增加噪声对宽带功率产生相加效应,并且它与同步视觉输入相互作用以放大它们。