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Article Abstract

Gamma activity (γ, >30 Hz) is universally demonstrated across brain regions and species. However, the physiological basis and functional role of γ sub-bands (slow-γ, mid-γ, fast-γ) have been predominantly studied in rodent hippocampus; γ activity in the human neocortex is much less well understood. We use electrophysiology, non-invasive brain stimulation, and several motor tasks to examine the properties of sensorimotor γ activity sub-bands and their relationship with both local GABAergic activity and motor learning. Data from three experimental studies are presented. Experiment 1 (N = 33) comprises magnetoencephalography (MEG), transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), and a motor learning paradigm; experiment 2 (N = 19) uses MEG and motor learning; and experiment 3 (N = 18) uses EEG and TMS. We characterised two distinct γ sub-bands (slow-γ, mid-γ) which show a movement-related increase in activity during unilateral index finger movements and are characterised by distinct temporal-spectral-spatial profiles. Bayesian correlation analysis revealed strong evidence for a positive relationship between slow-γ (~30-60 Hz) peak frequency and GABAergic intracortical inhibition (as assessed using the TMS-metric short interval intracortical inhibition). There was also moderate evidence for a relationship between the power of the movement-related mid-γ activity (60-90 Hz) and motor learning. These relationships were neurochemical and frequency specific. These data provide new insights into the neurophysiological basis and functional roles of γ activity in human M1 and allow the development of a new theoretical framework for γ activity in the human neocortex.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12319822PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/imag_a_00538DOI Listing

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