Abstract

SummaryThe relationship between the firing of single cells and local field potentials (LFPs) has received increasing attention, with studies in animals [1–11] and humans [12–14]. Recordings in the human medial temporal lobe (MTL) have demonstrated the existence of neurons with selective and invariant responses [15], with a relatively late but precise response onset around 300 ms after stimulus presentation [16–18] and firing only upon conscious recognition of the stimulus [19]. This represents a much later onset than expected from direct projections from inferotemporal cortex [16, 18]. The neural mechanisms underlying this onset remain unclear. To address this issue, we performed a joint analysis of single-cell and LFP responses during a visual recognition task. Single-neuron responses were preceded by a global LFP deflection in the theta range. In addition, there was a local and stimulus-specific increase in the single-trial gamma power. These LFP responses correlated with conscious recognition. The timing of the neurons’ firing was phase locked to these LFP responses. We propose that whereas the gamma phase locking reflects the activation of local networks encoding particular recognized stimuli, the theta phase locking reflects a global activation that provides a temporal window for processing consciously perceived stimuli in the MTL.

Highlights

  • We recorded single-neuron and local field potential (LFP) activity during twelve sessions in five patients with pharmacologically intractable epilepsy, who were implanted with intracranial electrodes for clinical reasons

  • Given that single-trial responses may cancel out when averaging across trials, we studied the power of the single-trial local field potentials (LFPs) responses (Figure 1B, right) instead of calculating the power after averaging, as with the evoked responses

  • Selectivity Analysis we studied the probability of occurrence and degree of spatial localization of these LFP responses (Figure 2A)

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Summary

Objectives

Beside the relation of these single-unit and LFP responses to visual awareness, the main objective of this work was to study the relationship between the LFP and spike responses in the human MTL to give insights into the timing of single units’ firing, and the very late onset of the units’ responses

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