Abstract

This review assesses experimental studies of the functioning of the human brain in the resting state. In this state, brain activity has a specific organization in space and time. The spatial (topographical) aspect of this organization consists of the existence of resting state networks, while the temporal organization is apparent as the dynamics of brain electrical activity typical of the resting state. The contributions of studies of the temporospatial organization of brain activity to the overall set of theoretical concepts of the relationships between the structural organization of the brain and its neuronal activity are discussed.

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