Spontaneous Fluctuations in Posterior -Band EEG Activity Reflect Variability in Excitability of Human Visual Areas
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 18 December 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 18 (9) , 2010-2018
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhm229
Abstract
Neural activity fluctuates dynamically with time, and these changes have been reported to be of behavioral significance, despite occurring spontaneously. Through electroencephalography (EEG), fluctuations in α-band (8–14 Hz) activity have been identified over posterior sites that covary on a trial-by-trial basis with whether an upcoming visual stimulus will be detected or not. These fluctuations are thought to index the momentary state of visual cortex excitability. Here, we tested this hypothesis by directly exciting human visual cortex via transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to induce illusory visual percepts (phosphenes) in blindfolded participants, while simultaneously recording EEG. We found that identical TMS-stimuli evoked a percept (P-yes) or not (P-no) depending on prestimulus α-activity. Low prestimulus α-band power resulted in TMS reliably inducing phosphenes (P-yes trials), whereas high prestimulus α-values led the same TMS-stimuli failing to evoke a visual percept (P-no trials). Additional analyses indicated that the perceptually relevant fluctuations in α-activity/visual cortex excitability were spatially specific and occurred on a subsecond time scale in a recurrent pattern. Our data directly link momentary levels of posterior α-band activity to distinct states of visual cortex excitability, and suggest that their spontaneous fluctuation constitutes a visual operation mode that is activated automatically even without retinal input.Keywords
This publication has 62 references indexed in Scilit:
- Spatial Attention Changes Excitability of Human Visual Cortex to Direct StimulationCurrent Biology, 2007
- α-Band Electroencephalographic Activity over Occipital Cortex Indexes Visuospatial Attention Bias and Predicts Visual Target DetectionJournal of Neuroscience, 2006
- Consistent resting-state networks across healthy subjectsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Stimulation of the Human Frontal Eye Fields Modulates Sensitivity of Extrastriate Visual CortexJournal of Neurophysiology, 2006
- Spontaneous neuronal activity distinguishes human dorsal and ventral attention systemsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Pre-target activity in visual cortex predicts behavioral performance on spatial and feature attention tasksBrain Research, 2006
- Attentional shifts towards an expected visual target alter the level of alpha-band oscillatory activity in the human calcarine cortexCognitive Brain Research, 2005
- Neural responses in cat visual cortex reflect state changes in correlated activityEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2005
- Alpha rhythm of the EEG modulates visual detection performance in humansPublished by Elsevier ,2004
- Searching for a baseline: Functional imaging and the resting human brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2001