Statistical learning in epilepsy: Behavioral and anatomical mechanisms in the human brain

Author:

Aljishi Ayman12ORCID,Sherman Brynn E.3,Huberdeau David M.3,Obaid Sami1,Khan Kamren1,Lamsam Layton1ORCID,Zibly Zion1,Sivaraju Adithya4ORCID,Turk‐Browne Nicholas B.35,Damisah Eyiyemisi C.156

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

2. Department of Psychology Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee USA

3. Department of Psychology Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

4. Department of Neurology Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

5. Wu Tsai Institute Yale University New Haven Connecticut USA

6. Department of Neuroscience Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveStatistical learning, the fundamental cognitive ability of humans to extract regularities across experiences over time, engages the medial temporal lobe (MTL) in the healthy brain. This leads to the hypothesis that statistical learning (SL) may be impaired in patients with epilepsy (PWE) involving the temporal lobe, and that this impairment could contribute to their varied memory deficits. In turn, studies done in collaboration with PWE, that evaluate the necessity of MTL circuitry through disease and causal perturbations, provide an opportunity to advance basic understanding of SL.MethodsWe implemented behavioral testing, volumetric analysis of the MTL substructures, and direct electrical brain stimulation to examine SL across a cohort of 61 PWE and 28 healthy controls.ResultsWe found that behavioral performance in an SL task was negatively associated with seizure frequency irrespective of seizure origin. The volume of hippocampal subfields CA1 and CA2/3 correlated with SL performance, suggesting a more specific role of the hippocampus. Transient direct electrical stimulation of the hippocampus disrupted SL. Furthermore, the relationship between SL and seizure frequency was selective, as behavioral performance in an episodic memory task was not impacted by seizure frequency.SignificanceOverall, these results suggest that SL may be hippocampally dependent and that the SL task could serve as a clinically useful behavioral assay of seizure frequency that may complement existing approaches such as seizure diaries. Simple and short SL tasks may thus provide patient‐centered endpoints for evaluating the efficacy of novel treatments in epilepsy.

Funder

Canadian Institute for Advanced Research

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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