scholarly journals Gating of attentional effort through the central thalamus

2013 ◽  
Vol 109 (4) ◽  
pp. 1152-1163 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. D. Schiff ◽  
S. A. Shah ◽  
A. E. Hudson ◽  
T. Nauvel ◽  
S. F. Kalik ◽  
...  

The central thalamus plays an important role in the regulation of arousal and allocation of attentional resources in the performance of even simple tasks. To assess the contribution of central thalamic neurons to short-term adjustments of attentional effort, we analyzed 166 microelectrode recordings obtained from two rhesus monkeys performing a visuomotor simple reaction time task with a variable foreperiod. Multiunit responses showed maintained firing rate elevations during the variable delay period of the task in ∼24% of recording sites. Simultaneously recorded local field potentials demonstrated significant decreases in power at ∼10–20 Hz and increases in power at 30–100 Hz during the delay period when compared against precue baselines. Comparison of the spectral power of local field potentials during the delay period of correct and incorrect trials showed that, during incorrect trials, similar, but reduced, shifts of spectral power occurred within the same frequency bands. Sustained performance of even simple tasks requires regulation of arousal and attention that combine in the concept of “attentional effort”. Our findings suggest that central thalamic neurons regulate task performance through brief changes in firing rates and spectral power changes during task-relevant short-term shifts of attentional effort. Increases in attentional effort may be reflected in changes within the central thalamic local populations, where correct task performance associates with more robust maintenance of firing rates during the delay period. Such ongoing fluctuations of central thalamic activity likely reflect a mix of influences, including variations in moment-to-moment levels of motivation, arousal, and availability of cognitive resources.

Neurosurgery ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 66 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilknur Telkes ◽  
Jennifer Durphy ◽  
Octavian Adam ◽  
Nataly Raviv ◽  
Julie G Pilitsis

Abstract INTRODUCTION One of the biggest limitations of deep brain stimulation (DBS) therapy is the stimulation induced side effects due to restricted size of functional areas in subthalamic nucleus (STN) and the proximity of structures. The segmented DBS lead technology aims to address this problem by delivering more selected, focal modulation via smaller, directional contacts. However, the DBS programming becomes more complex and time-consuming for clinical feasibility. Here in this pilot study, we investigated the spectral power distribution of directional local field potentials (LFPs) in STN and their relationship to motor symptoms of Parkinson disease (PD). METHODS We recorded 8-channel intraoperative LFPs in 9 PD patients at resting and during stimulation OFF. Power-frequency spectra were computed for all individual contacts and then grouped according to which anatomical directions they are facing. Beta (13-20 Hz/20-35 Hz) and alpha (7-12 Hz) band powers were calculated and their correlation to preoperative UPDRS-3 scores (51.7 ± 21.9 d before the DBS surgery) and the clinical programming were evaluated. RESULTS The average depth-frequency maps demonstrated different spectral dynamics across anterior, medial, and lateral directions. Patients with severe tremor compared to nontremor subjects showed higher beta power in anterior and lateral directions. Beta band power were positively correlated with the tremor severity and significantly correlated with clinical stimulation amplitude (mA) in anterior direction (P < .05). Correlation analysis between beta power and the other UPDRS-3 items such as bradykinesia/rigidity or postural instability and gait disturbance did not show clear trends towards a direction. CONCLUSION Given that testing all possible combinations of contact pairs and stimulation parameters is not feasible in a single clinic visit, spatio-spectral dynamics obtained from intraoperative recordings of LFPs might be used as an initial marker to select optimal contact (s). LFPs carry pathological signatures of PD and they might provide a functional use to predict optimal stimulation parameters in future. These features as well as higher frequency and cross-coupling dynamics of LFPs need to be studied in detail with larger subject populations.


2003 ◽  
Vol 90 (3) ◽  
pp. 1910-1920 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christoph Kayser ◽  
Rodrigo F. Salazar ◽  
Peter König

Studies on processing in primary visual areas often use artificial stimuli such as bars or gratings. As a result, little is known about the properties of activity patterns for the natural stimuli processed by the visual system on a daily basis. Furthermore, in the cat, a well-studied model system for visual processing, most results are obtained from anesthetized subjects and little is known about neuronal activations in the alert animal. Addressing these issues, we measure local field potentials (lfp) and multiunit spikes in the primary visual cortex of awake cats. We compare changes in the lfp power spectra and multiunit firing rates for natural movies, movies with modified spatio-temporal correlations as well as gratings. The activity patterns elicited by drifting gratings are qualitatively and quantitatively different from those elicited by natural stimuli and this difference arises from both spatial as well as temporal properties of the stimuli. Furthermore, both local field potentials and multiunit firing rates are most sensitive to the second-order statistics of the stimuli and not to their higher-order properties. Finally, responses to natural movies show a large variability over time because of activity fluctuations induced by rapid stimulus motion. We show that these fluctuations are not dependent on the detailed spatial properties of the stimuli but depend on their temporal jitter. These fluctuations are important characteristics of visual activity under natural conditions and impose limitations on the readout of possible differences in mean activity levels.


2006 ◽  
Vol 96 (3) ◽  
pp. 1492-1506 ◽  
Author(s):  
John G. O'Leary ◽  
Nicholas G. Hatsopoulos

Local field potentials (LFPs) recorded from primary motor cortex (MI) have been shown to be tuned to the direction of visually guided reaching movements, but MI LFPs have not been shown to be tuned to the direction of an upcoming movement during the delay period that precedes movement in an instructed-delay reaching task. Also, LFPs in dorsal premotor cortex (PMd) have not been investigated in this context. We therefore recorded LFPs from MI and PMd of monkeys ( Macaca mulatta) and investigated whether these LFPs were tuned to the direction of the upcoming movement during the delay period. In three frequency bands we identified LFP activity that was phase-locked to the onset of the instruction stimulus that specified the direction of the upcoming reach. The amplitude of this activity was often tuned to target direction with tuning widths that varied across different electrodes and frequency bands. Single-trial decoding of LFPs demonstrated that prediction of target direction from this activity was possible well before the actual movement is initiated. Decoding performance was significantly better in the slowest-frequency band compared with that in the other two higher-frequency bands. Although these results demonstrate that task-related information is available in the local field potentials, correlations among these signals recorded from a densely packed array of electrodes suggests that adequate decoding performance for neural prosthesis applications may be limited as the number of simultaneous electrode recordings is increased.


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