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Dynamic cross-frequency couplings of local field potential oscillations in rat striatum and hippocampus during performance of a T-maze task
Authors:Adriano B. L. Tort   Mark A. Kramer   Catherine Thorn   Daniel J. Gibson   Yasuo Kubota   Ann M. Graybiel     Nancy J. Kopell
Affiliation:aDepartment of Mathematics and Center for BioDynamics, Boston University, Boston, MA 02215; ;bDepartment of Biochemistry, Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul, Porto Alegre, RS 90035, Brazil; and ;cMcGovern Institute for Brain Research and ;Departments of dElectrical Engineering and Computer Science, and ;eBrain and Cognitive Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA 02139
Abstract:Oscillatory rhythms in different frequency ranges mark different behavioral states and are thought to provide distinct temporal windows that coherently bind cooperating neuronal assemblies. However, the rhythms in different bands can also interact with each other, suggesting the possibility of higher-order representations of brain states by such rhythmic activity. To explore this possibility, we analyzed local field potential oscillations recorded simultaneously from the striatum and the hippocampus. As rats performed a task requiring active navigation and decision making, the amplitudes of multiple high-frequency oscillations were dynamically modulated in task-dependent patterns by the phase of cooccurring theta-band oscillations both within and across these structures, particularly during decision-making behavioral epochs. Moreover, the modulation patterns uncovered distinctions among both high- and low-frequency subbands. Cross-frequency coupling of multiple neuronal rhythms could be a general mechanism used by the brain to perform network-level dynamical computations underlying voluntary behavior.
Keywords:amplitude modulation   gamma   theta
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