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Title: Tactile expectation modulates pre-stimulus beta-band oscillations in human sensorimotor cortex
Author(s): Ede, F. van
Jensen, O.
Maris, E. (184925568)
Publication year: 2010
Document type: Article / Letter to editor
Journal: Neuroimage
ISSN: 1053-8119
Volume: vol. 51
Issue: iss. 2
Start page: p. 867
End page: p. 876
Annotation: 589IT Times Cited:0 Cited References Count:53
Abstract: Neuronal oscillations are postulated to play a fundamental role in top-down processes of expectation. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to investigate whether expectation of a tactile event involves a pre-stimulus modulation of neuronal oscillations in human somatosensory cortex. In a bimodal attention paradigm, participants were presented with a predictable spatio-temporal pattern of lateralized tactile stimulations and simultaneously occurring non-lateralized auditory stimuli. Before the onset of a series of such combined audio-tactile stimuli, a cue was presented that indicated the sensory stream that had to be attended. By investigating lateralized patterns of oscillatory activity, we were able to study both attentive (when the tactile stream was attended) and non-attentive (when the auditory stream was attended) tactile expectations. For both attention conditions, we observed a lateralized modulation of the amplitude of beta band oscillations prior to a predictable - and accordingly lateralized - tactile stimulus. As such, we show that anticipatory modulation of ongoing oscillatory activity is not restricted to attended sensory events. Attention did enlarge the size of this modulation. We argue that this modulation constitutes a suppression of beta oscillations that originate at least partly from primary somatosensory cortex (Si) contralateral to the expected stimulation. We discuss our results in the light of the hypothesis that ongoing beta oscillations over sensorimotor cortex reflect a brain state in which neuronal processing efficacy is low. Pre-stimulus suppression of these oscillations then prepares the system for future processing. This shows that perception is an active process that starts even prior to sensation. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Subject: 160 000 Neuronal Oscillations
Organization: F.C. Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging
SW OZ DCC BI
Appears in Collections:Academic bibliography

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/2066/90355

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