Topographic Analysis of Engagement and Disengagement of Neural Oscillators in Photic Driving: A Combined Electroencephalogram/Magnetoencephalogram Study

OBJECTIVEA coupled system of nonlinear neural oscillators with an individual resonance frequency is assumed to form the neuronal substrate for the photic driving phenomenon. The aim was to investigate the spatiotemporal stability of these oscillators and quantify the spatiotemporal process of engage...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of clinical neurophysiology 2012-02, Vol.29 (1), p.33-41
Hauptverfasser: Halbleib, Andreas, Gratkowski, Maciej, Schwab, Karin, Ligges, Carolin, Witte, Herbert, Haueisen, Jens
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVEA coupled system of nonlinear neural oscillators with an individual resonance frequency is assumed to form the neuronal substrate for the photic driving phenomenon. The aim was to investigate the spatiotemporal stability of these oscillators and quantify the spatiotemporal process of engagement and disengagement of the neuronal oscillators in both multitrial and single-trial data. METHODSWhite light-emitting diode flicker stimulation was used at 15 frequencies, which were set relative to the individual α frequency of each of the 10 healthy participants. Simultaneously, the electroencephalogram (EEG) and the magnetoencephalogram (MEG) were recorded. Subsequently, spatiotemporal matching pursuit (MP) algorithms were used to analyze the EEG and MEG topographies. RESULTSIntraindividually similar topographies were found at stimulation frequencies close to (1) the individual α frequency and (2) half the individual α frequency in the multitrial and the single-trial cases. In both stimulation frequency ranges, the authors observed stable topographies 5 to 10 stimuli after the beginning of the stimulation and lasting three nonexisting periods after the end of the stimulation. This was interpreted as the engaging/disengaging effect of the observed oscillations, because especially the frequency parameter adopted before and after stable topographies were observed. Topographic entrainment was slightly more pronounced in MEG as compared with that in EEG. CONCLUSIONSThe results support the hypothesis of nonlinear information processing in human visual system, which can be described by nonlinear neural oscillators.
ISSN:0736-0258
1537-1603
DOI:10.1097/WNP.0b013e318246ad6e