High-frequency activity (HFA) is believed to subserve a functional role in cognition, but these patterns are often not accessible to scalp EEG recordings. Intracranial studies provide a unique opportunity to link the all-encompassing range of high-frequency patterns with holistic perception. We tested whether the functional topography of HFAs (up to 250Hz) is related to perceptual decision-making. Human intracortical data were recorded (6 subjects; >250channels) during an ambiguous object-recognition task. We found a spatial topography of HFAs reflecting processing anterior dorsal and ventral streams, linked to decision independently of the type of processed object/stimulus category. Three distinct regional fingerprints could be identified, with lower gamma frequency patterns (<45Hz) dominating in the anterior semantic ventral object processing and dorsoventral integrating networks and evolving later, during perceptual decision phases, than early sensory posterior patterns (60-250Hz). This suggests that accurate object recognition/perceptual decision-making is related to distinct spatiotemporal signatures in the low gamma frequency range.
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.
CITATION STYLE
Castelhano, J., Duarte, I. C., Abuhaiba, S. I., Rito, M., Sales, F., & Castelo-Branco, M. (2017). Cortical functional topography of high-frequency gamma activity relates to perceptual decision: An Intracranial study. PLoS ONE, 12(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0186428