Millisecond precision temporal encoding of stimulus features during cortically generated gamma oscillations in the rat somatosensory cortex.
Thomas BessaihMichael J HigleyDiego ContrerasPublished in: The Journal of physiology (2018)
In the natural environment, tactile exploration often leads to high-frequency vibrations at the level of the sensory organs. Single-unit recordings of cortical neurons have pointed towards either a rate or a temporal code for representing high-frequency tactile signals. In cortical networks, sensory processing results from the interaction between feedforward inputs relayed from the thalamus and internally generated activity. However, how the emergent activity represents high-frequency sensory input is not fully understood. Using multisite single-unit, local field potential and intracellular recordings in the somatosensory cortex and thalamus of lightly sedated male rats, we measured neuronal responses evoked by sinusoidal and band-pass white noise whisker stimulation at frequencies that encompass those observed during texture exploration (50-200 Hz). We found that high-frequency sensory inputs relayed from the thalamus elicit both sub-millisecond stimulus-locked responses and internally generated gamma (20-60 Hz) band oscillations in cortical networks. Gamma oscillations modulate spike probability while preserving sub-millisecond phase relations with sensory inputs. Therefore, precise stimulus-locked spiking activity and sensory-induced gamma oscillations can constitute independent multiplexed coding schemes at the single-cell level.
Keyphrases
- high frequency
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- working memory
- single cell
- deep brain stimulation
- functional connectivity
- rna seq
- spinal cord
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- oxidative stress
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- air pollution
- high throughput
- human health
- drug induced
- cerebral ischemia