Objective: Ictal electrographic patterns are widely thought to reflect underlying neural mechanisms of seizures. Here we studied the degree to which seizure patterns are consistent in a given patient, relate to particular brain regions and if two candidate biomarkers (high-frequency oscillations, HFOs; infraslow activity, ISA) and network activity, as assessed with cross-frequency interactions, can discriminate between seizure types.
Methods: We analyzed temporal changes in low and high frequency oscillations recorded during seizures, as well as phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) to monitor the interactions between delta/theta and ripple/fast ripple frequency bands at seizure onset.
Cross frequency coupling (CFC) is emerging as a fundamental feature of brain activity, correlated with brain function and dysfunction. Many different types of CFC have been identified through application of numerous data analysis methods, each developed to characterize a specific CFC type. Choosing an inappropriate method weakens statistical power and introduces opportunities for confounding effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The treatment of focal epilepsies is largely predicated on the concept that there is a "focus" from which the seizure emanates. Yet, the physiological context that determines if and how ictal activity starts and propagates remains poorly understood. To delineate these phenomena more completely, we studied activity outside the seizure-onset zone prior to and during seizure initiation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnderstanding the spatiotemporal dynamics of brain activity is crucial for inferring the underlying synaptic and nonsynaptic mechanisms of brain dysfunction. Focal seizures with secondary generalization are traditionally considered to begin in a limited spatial region and spread to connected areas, which can include both pathological and normal brain tissue. The mechanisms underlying this spread are important to our understanding of seizures and to improve therapies for surgical intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interplay between hippocampus and prefrontal cortex (PFC) is fundamental to spatial cognition. Complementing hippocampal place coding, prefrontal representations provide more abstract and hierarchically organized memories suitable for decision making. We model a prefrontal network mediating distributed information processing for spatial learning and action planning.
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