Relationship between task‐related gamma oscillations and BOLD signal: New insights from combined fMRI and intracranial EEG
Top Cited Papers
- 1 February 2007
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Human Brain Mapping
- Vol. 28 (12) , 1368-1375
- https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.20352
Abstract
Cognitive neuroscience relies on two sets of techniques to map the neural networks underlying cognition in humans: recordings of either regional metabolic changes (fMRI or PET) or fluctuations in the neural electromagnetic fields (EEG and MEG). Despite major advances in the last few years, an explicit linkage between the two is still missing and the neuroimaging community faces two complementary but unrelated sets of functional descriptions of the human brain. Such an explicit framework, linking the two approaches in potentially complex cognitive tasks and in a variety of brain regions would permit to combine them into fine spatio‐temporally‐grained human brain mapping procedures. We combined fMRI and intra‐cranial EEG recordings of the same epileptic patients during a semantic decision task and found a close spatial correspondence between regions of fMRI activations and recording sites showing EEG energy modulations in the gamma range (>40 Hz). Our findings further support previous findings that gamma band modulations co‐localize with BOLD variations and also indicate that fMRI may be used as a constraint to improve source reconstruction of gamma band EEG responses. Hum Brain Mapp, 2007.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- A mechanism for cognitive dynamics: neuronal communication through neuronal coherenceTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2005
- High gamma frequency oscillatory activity dissociates attention from intention in the human premotor cortexNeuroImage, 2005
- Gamma Oscillations Correlate with Working Memory Load in HumansCerebral Cortex, 2003
- Is synchronized neuronal gamma activity relevant for selective attention?Brain Research Reviews, 2003
- The BOLD response and the gamma oscillations respond differently than evoked potentials: an interleaved EEG-fMRI studyBMC Neuroscience, 2003
- Human memory formation is accompanied by rhinal–hippocampal coupling and decouplingNature Neuroscience, 2001
- Modulation of Oscillatory Neuronal Synchronization by Selective Visual AttentionScience, 2001
- Temporal Binding, Binocular Rivalry, and ConsciousnessConsciousness and Cognition, 1999
- Functional mapping of human sensorimotor cortex with electrocorticographic spectral analysis. I. Alpha and beta event- related desynchronizationBrain, 1998
- Functional mapping of human sensorimotor cortex with electrocorticographic spectral analysis. II. Event-related synchronization in the gamma bandBrain, 1998