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Quantifying Phase-Amplitude Modulation in Neural Data.

Victoria Subritzky-KatzAaron L SampsonErik EmericWitold LipskiSophia Moreira-GonzálezJorge González-MartínezSridevi SarmaVeit StuphornErnst Niebur
Published in: ... Annual Conference on Information Sciences and Systems. Annual Conference on Information Sciences and Systems (2023)
Phase-amplitude modulation (the modulation of the amplitude of higher frequency oscillations by the phase of lower frequency oscillations) is a specific type of cross-frequency coupling that has been observed in neural recordings from multiple species in a range of behavioral contexts. Given its potential importance, care must be taken with how it is measured and quantified. Previous studies have quantified phase-amplitude modulation by measuring the distance of the amplitude distribution from a uniform distribution. While this method is of general applicability, it is not targeted to the specific modulation pattern frequently observed with low-frequency oscillations. Here we develop a new method that has increased specificity to detect modulation in the sinusoidal shape commonly observed in neural data.
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