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Differential Sources for 2 Neural Signatures of Target Detection: An Electrocorticography Study

Kam, J W Y; Szczepanski, S M; Canolty, R T; Flinker, A; Auguste, K I; Crone, N E; Kirsch, H E; Kuperman, R A; Lin, J J; Parvizi, J; Knight, R T
Electrophysiology and neuroimaging provide conflicting evidence for the neural contributions to target detection. Scalp electroencephalography (EEG) studies localize the P3b event-related potential component mainly to parietal cortex, whereas neuroimaging studies report activations in both frontal and parietal cortices. We addressed this discrepancy by examining the sources that generate the target-detection process using electrocorticography (ECoG). We recorded ECoG activity from cortex in 14 patients undergoing epilepsy monitoring, as they performed an auditory or visual target-detection task. We examined target-related responses in 2 domains: high frequency band (HFB) activity and the P3b. Across tasks, we observed a greater proportion of electrodes that showed target-specific HFB power relative to P3b over frontal cortex, but their proportions over parietal cortex were comparable. Notably, there was minimal overlap in the electrodes that showed target-specific HFB and P3b activity. These results revealed that the target-detection process is characterized by at least 2 different neural markers with distinct cortical distributions. Our findings suggest that separate neural mechanisms are driving the differential patterns of activity observed in scalp EEG and neuroimaging studies, with the P3b reflecting EEG findings and HFB activity reflecting neuroimaging findings, highlighting the notion that target detection is not a unitary phenomenon.
PMID: 29253249
ISSN: 1460-2199
CID: 2911192

Spatial-temporal functional mapping of language at the bedside with electrocorticography

Babajani-Feremi, Abbas; Wheless, James W; Papanicolaou, James W; Wang, Yujing; Fifer, Matthew S; Flinker, Adeen; Korzeniewska, Anna; Cervenka, Mackenzie C; Anderson, William S; Boatman-Reich, Dana F; Crone, Nathan E
PMID: 27956570
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 2545662

Spatial-temporal functional mapping of language at the bedside with electrocorticography

Wang, Yujing; Fifer, Matthew S; Flinker, Adeen; Korzeniewska, Anna; Cervenka, Mackenzie C; Anderson, William S; Boatman-Reich, Dana F; Crone, Nathan E
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the feasibility and clinical utility of using passive electrocorticography (ECoG) for online spatial-temporal functional mapping (STFM) of language cortex in patients being monitored for epilepsy surgery. METHODS: We developed and tested an online system that exploits ECoG's temporal resolution to display the evolution of statistically significant high gamma (70-110 Hz) responses across all recording sites activated by a discrete cognitive task. We illustrate how this spatial-temporal evolution can be used to study the function of individual recording sites engaged during different language tasks, and how this approach can be particularly useful for mapping eloquent cortex. RESULTS: Using electrocortical stimulation mapping (ESM) as the clinical gold standard for localizing language cortex, the average sensitivity and specificity of online STFM across 7 patients were 69.9% and 83.5%, respectively. Moreover, relative to regions of interest where discrete cortical lesions have most reliably caused language impairments in the literature, the sensitivity of STFM was significantly greater than that of ESM, while its specificity was also greater than that of ESM, though not significantly so. CONCLUSIONS: This study supports the feasibility and clinical utility of online STFM for mapping human language function, particularly under clinical circumstances in which time is limited and comprehensive ESM is impractical.
PMCID:4818563
PMID: 26935890
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 2545682

A Cool Approach to Probing Speech Cortex [Comment]

Flinker, Adeen; Knight, Robert T
In this issue of Neuron, Long et al. (2016) employ a novel technique of intraoperative cortical cooling in humans during speech production. They demonstrate that cooling Broca's area interferes with speech timing but not speech quality.
PMCID:4864495
PMID: 26985719
ISSN: 1097-4199
CID: 2545672

Speech sounds

Chapter by: Pasley, BN; Flinker, A; Knight, RT
in: Brain mapping : an encyclopedic reference by Toga, Arthur W [Eds]
London, UK : Academic Press, [2015]
pp. 661-666
ISBN: 0123970253
CID: 2681342

ELECTROCORTICOGRAPHIC SPECTRAL MAPPING FOR THE CORTICAL ORGANIZATION OF HUMAN BEHAVIOR [Meeting Abstract]

Chang, Edward F; Edwards, E; Flinker, A; Secundo, L; Kirsch, H; Barbaro, N; Knight, R
ISI:000270550500043
ISSN: 0013-9580
CID: 2545762

Predicting odor pleasantness from odorant structure: pleasantness as a reflection of the physical world

Khan, Rehan M; Luk, Chung-Hay; Flinker, Adeen; Aggarwal, Amit; Lapid, Hadas; Haddad, Rafi; Sobel, Noam
Although it is agreed that physicochemical features of molecules determine their perceived odor, the rules governing this relationship remain unknown. A significant obstacle to such understanding is the high dimensionality of features describing both percepts and molecules. We applied a statistical method to reduce dimensionality in both odor percepts and physicochemical descriptors for a large set of molecules. We found that the primary axis of perception was odor pleasantness, and critically, that the primary axis of physicochemical properties reflected the primary axis of olfactory perception. This allowed us to predict the pleasantness of novel molecules by their physicochemical properties alone. Olfactory perception is strongly shaped by experience and learning. However, our findings suggest that olfactory pleasantness is also partially innate, corresponding to a natural axis of maximal discriminability among biologically relevant molecules.
PMID: 17855616
ISSN: 1529-2401
CID: 2545732

Molecular structure predicts human judgments of pleasantness and similarity [Meeting Abstract]

Khan, RM; Luk, C; Flinker, A; Sobel, N
ISI:000238761600181
ISSN: 0379-864x
CID: 2545752