Multimodal single-neuron, intracranial EEG, and fMRI brain responses during movie watching in human patients.
Umit KelesJulien DuboisKevin J M LeJulian Michael TyszkaDavid A KahnChrystal M ReedJeffrey M ChungAdam N MamelakRalph AdolphsUeli RutishauserPublished in: Scientific data (2024)
We present a multimodal dataset of intracranial recordings, fMRI, and eye tracking in 20 participants during movie watching. Recordings consist of single neurons, local field potential, and intracranial EEG activity acquired from depth electrodes targeting the amygdala, hippocampus, and medial frontal cortex implanted for monitoring of epileptic seizures. Participants watched an 8-min long excerpt from the video "Bang! You're Dead" and performed a recognition memory test for movie content. 3 T fMRI activity was recorded prior to surgery in 11 of these participants while performing the same task. This NWB- and BIDS-formatted dataset includes spike times, field potential activity, behavior, eye tracking, electrode locations, demographics, and functional and structural MRI scans. For technical validation, we provide signal quality metrics, assess eye tracking quality, behavior, the tuning of cells and high-frequency broadband power field potentials to familiarity and event boundaries, and show brain-wide inter-subject correlations for fMRI. This dataset will facilitate the investigation of brain activity during movie watching, recognition memory, and the neural basis of the fMRI-BOLD signal.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- high frequency
- end stage renal disease
- transcranial magnetic stimulation
- endothelial cells
- minimally invasive
- ejection fraction
- computed tomography
- newly diagnosed
- magnetic resonance imaging
- induced apoptosis
- chronic kidney disease
- optic nerve
- pain management
- peritoneal dialysis
- spinal cord
- multiple sclerosis
- cognitive impairment
- drug delivery
- contrast enhanced
- acute coronary syndrome
- human health
- mass spectrometry
- coronary artery bypass
- magnetic resonance
- white matter
- optical coherence tomography
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- chronic pain
- climate change
- stress induced
- gold nanoparticles
- cell death
- reduced graphene oxide