Sensory-evoked propagating waves of activity in the primary sensory cortices: Poorly understood, yet ubiquitous

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Abstract

Any sensory stimulus evokes a propagating wave of activity in the corresponding sensory cortex that exceeds its topographical boundaries within the primary sensory map. Hama and colleagues (Hama N, Kawai M, Ito S-I, Hirota A. J Neurophysiol 119: 1934 –1946, 2018) provided a first study, in the tactile modality, of the interactions between two successively evoked waves. We argue that the difficulty in finding a simple rule to account for all the various observed interactions calls for an effort to clarify the mechanisms and substrates of the propagating waves and their role in sensory processing.

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Corbo, J., & Caron-Guyon, J. (2018). Sensory-evoked propagating waves of activity in the primary sensory cortices: Poorly understood, yet ubiquitous. Journal of Neurophysiology, 120(3), 885–888. https://doi.org/10.1152/jn.00319.2018

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