Abstract
It is well known that rhythmic light stimulation can alter the electrical activity of the human and animal brain. Moreover, the brain response to certain flicker frequencies significantly exceeds the responses to neighboring frequencies. This phenomenon is thought to be related with the effect of resonance, as evidenced by the coincidence of one of the maxima in the profile of the response to flashes with the frequency of the alpha rhythm. However, other frequencies that cause an increased response to flashes are not reflected in electroencephalogram (EEG) as dominant oscillations. The goal of this study was to reveal the relationship between local maxima in the profile of the responses to flashes of different frequencies and dominant brain oscillations recorded in electrocorticogram (ECoG) of rhesus monkeys without stimulation. The study was carried out on four male Macaca mulatta individuals. In three animals, peak responses were elicited by flickers at 8 and 16 Hz, while one monkey showed a second peak in the 22−30 Hz range. The first maximum (8−10 Hz) in the profile of the response to rhythmic photostimulation coincided with the dominant rhythm recorded in the occipital and parietal regions at rest. The second maximum at 16 Hz coincided with the dominant ECoG rhythm in one of the primates when it was in the state of emotional arousal, which may account for the resonant origin of the increase in responses in this frequency range. The data obtained indicate that dominant brain rhythms, including latent rhythms revealed only by rhythmic photostimulation, can coincide in frequency in monkeys and humans. Neuronal mechanisms of selective sensitivity of neural networks to different frequencies of photostimulation are discussed.
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