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Az MTA TTK Kognitív Idegtudományi és Pszichológiai Intézete szeretettel
hív minden érdeklődőt Michael Kahana professzor (University of
Pennsylvania) előadására.
Az előadás címe: Memory networks in the human brain
Időpont: 2018. június 13. (szerda) 10 óra
Helyszín: MTA TTK Kisterem (1117 Bp., Magyar Tudósok körútja 2.)
Human memory function is highly variable, fluctuating between periods of
high and low performance even within a given person. Neurosurgical
patients with indwelling electrodes present a unique opportunity to
study the neural correlates of this variability and to define both the
features of neural activity at a given brain location and the functional
connections between brain regions that predict variability in memory
encoding and retrieval. Here, I will describe our recent efforts to
characterize brain networks that support memory via correlative (passive
neural recording) and causal (direct electrical stimulation) approaches.
Moreover, I discuss unifying motifs in human electrophysiology that were
revealed through these studies. Briefly, we have characterized
functional, memory-related networks at multiple spatial scales,
demonstrating that low-frequency signals exhibit reduced local power but
stronger functional connectivity during successful episodic encoding and
retrieval. Furthermore, many canonical memory regions emerge as hubs of
such low-frequency connections, including the lateral frontotemporal
cortices, the parahippocampal gyrus – and within it – the entorhinal
cortex. High-frequency bands (i.e. gamma, 30+ Hz) almost exclusively
exhibit desynchronization during successful memory operations. We
recently extended these correlative studies and used intracranial
stimulation to ask whether functional connections imply causality. We
confirmed that electrical stimulation within the MTL evokes increases in
theta power at remote regions, as predicted by the strength of
low-frequency functional connections. However, this relationship held
true only so long as stimulation occurred in or near white matter. These
findings demonstrate the importance of low-frequency connectivity to
episodic memory, integrating these findings over spatial scales and
through causal and correlative approaches. I will also discuss the role
of high (gamma) frequency activity and its role as a biomarker of
increased local activity supporting memory and other cognitive functions.
Bővebben az előadóról:
http://memory.psych.upenn.edu/Michael_J._Kahana
Üdvözlettel,
Gaál Zsófia Anna
--
Zsófia Anna Gaál, PhD
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology
Research Centre for Natural Sciences
Hungarian Academy of Sciences
Tel.: +36-1-382-6817
1519 Budapest, POB 286.
http://www.ttk.mta.hu/en/telefonkonyv/gaal-zsofia-anna/