| Keyword search (4,163 papers available) | ![]() |
"Magnetoencephalography" Keyword-tagged Publications:
| Title | Authors | PubMed ID | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Exploring Deep Magnetoencephalography via Thalamo-Cortical Sleep Spindles | Rattray GF; Jourde HR; Baillet S; Coffey EBJ; | 41002111 PSYCHOLOGY |
| 2 | The neurophysiology of closed-loop auditory stimulation in sleep: A magnetoencephalography study | Jourde HR; Merlo R; Brooks M; Rowe M; Coffey EBJ; | 37675803 CONCORDIA |
| 3 | Class imbalance should not throw you off balance: Choosing the right classifiers and performance metrics for brain decoding with imbalanced data | Thölke P; Mantilla-Ramos YJ; Abdelhedi H; Maschke C; Dehgan A; Harel Y; Kemtur A; Mekki Berrada L; Sahraoui M; Young T; Bellemare Pépin A; El Khantour C; Landry M; Pascarella A; Hadid V; Combrisson E; O' Byrne J; Jerbi K; | 37385392 IMAGING |
| 4 | Validating MEG source imaging of resting state oscillatory patterns with an intracranial EEG atlas | Afnan J; von Ellenrieder N; Lina JM; Pellegrino G; Arcara G; Cai Z; Hedrich T; Abdallah C; Khajehpour H; Frauscher B; Gotman J; Grova C; | 37149236 PERFORM |
| 5 | How cerebral cortex protects itself from interictal spikes: The alpha/beta inhibition mechanism | Pellegrino G; Hedrich T; Sziklas V; Lina JM; Grova C; Kobayashi E; | 34002916 PERFORM |
| 6 | Effects of Independent Component Analysis on Magnetoencephalography Source Localization in Pre-surgical Frontal Lobe Epilepsy Patients | Pellegrino G, Xu M, Alkuwaiti A, Porras-Bettancourt M, Abbas G, Lina JM, Grova C, Kobayashi E, | 32582009 PERFORM |
| 7 | Inferior Longitudinal Fasciculus' Role in Visual Processing and Language Comprehension: A Combined MEG-DTI Study. | Shin J, Rowley J, Chowdhury R, Jolicoeur P, Klein D, Grova C, Rosa-Neto P, Kobayashi E | 31507359 PERFORM |
| 8 | Localization Accuracy of Distributed Inverse Solutions for Electric and Magnetic Source Imaging of Interictal Epileptic Discharges in Patients with Focal Epilepsy. | Heers M, Chowdhury RA, Hedrich T, Dubeau F, Hall JA, Lina JM, Grova C, Kobayashi E | 25609211 PERFORM |
| Title: | The neurophysiology of closed-loop auditory stimulation in sleep: A magnetoencephalography study | ||||
| Authors: | Jourde HR, Merlo R, Brooks M, Rowe M, Coffey EBJ | ||||
| Link: | https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37675803/ | ||||
| DOI: | 10.1111/ejn.16132 | ||||
| Publication: | The European journal of neuroscience | ||||
| Keywords: | auditory-evoked response; closed-loop stimulation; electroencephalography (EEG); magnetoencephalography (MEG); sleep; sleep spindles; sleep stages; slow oscillations; | ||||
| PMID: | 37675803 | Category: | Date Added: | 2023-09-07 | |
| Dept Affiliation: | CONCORDIA | ||||
Description: |
Closed-loop auditory stimulation (CLAS) is a brain modulation technique in which sounds are timed to enhance or disrupt endogenous neurophysiological events. CLAS of slow oscillation up-states in sleep is becoming a popular tool to study and enhance sleep's functions, as it increases slow oscillations, evokes sleep spindles and enhances memory consolidation of certain tasks. However, few studies have examined the specific neurophysiological mechanisms involved in CLAS, in part because of practical limitations to available tools. To evaluate evidence for possible models of how sound stimulation during brain up-states alters brain activity, we simultaneously recorded electro- and magnetoencephalography in human participants who received auditory stimulation across sleep stages. We conducted a series of analyses that test different models of pathways through which CLAS of slow oscillations may affect widespread neural activity that have been suggested in literature, using spatial information, timing and phase relationships in the source-localized magnetoencephalography data. The results suggest that auditory information reaches ventral frontal lobe areas via non-lemniscal pathways. From there, a slow oscillation is created and propagated. We demonstrate that while the state of excitability of tissue in auditory cortex and frontal ventral regions shows some synchrony with the electroencephalography (EEG)-recorded up-states that are commonly used for CLAS, it is the state of ventral frontal regions that is most critical for slow oscillation generation. Our findings advance models of how CLAS leads to enhancement of slow oscillations, sleep spindles and associated cognitive benefits and offer insight into how the effectiveness of brain stimulation techniques can be improved. |



