Stimulus-dependent spiking relationships with the EEG

Author:

Snyder Adam C.12,Smith Matthew A.1234

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ophthalmology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania;

2. Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania;

3. Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and

4. Fox Center for Vision Restoration, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Abstract

The development and refinement of noninvasive techniques for imaging neural activity is of paramount importance for human neuroscience. Currently, the most accessible and popular technique is electroencephalography (EEG). However, nearly all of what we know about the neural events that underlie EEG signals is based on inference, because of the dearth of studies that have simultaneously paired EEG recordings with direct recordings of single neurons. From the perspective of electrophysiologists there is growing interest in understanding how spiking activity coordinates with large-scale cortical networks. Evidence from recordings at both scales highlights that sensory neurons operate in very distinct states during spontaneous and visually evoked activity, which appear to form extremes in a continuum of coordination in neural networks. We hypothesized that individual neurons have idiosyncratic relationships to large-scale network activity indexed by EEG signals, owing to the neurons' distinct computational roles within the local circuitry. We tested this by recording neuronal populations in visual area V4 of rhesus macaques while we simultaneously recorded EEG. We found substantial heterogeneity in the timing and strength of spike-EEG relationships and that these relationships became more diverse during visual stimulation compared with the spontaneous state. The visual stimulus apparently shifts V4 neurons from a state in which they are relatively uniformly embedded in large-scale network activity to a state in which their distinct roles within the local population are more prominent, suggesting that the specific way in which individual neurons relate to EEG signals may hold clues regarding their computational roles.

Funder

HHS | NIH | National Eye Institute (NEI)

Research to Prevent Blindness (RPB)

Research to Prevent Blindness

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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