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The visual system receives a wealth of sensory information of which only little is relevant for behaviour. We present a mechanism in which alpha oscillations serve to prioritize different components of visual information. By way of simulated neuronal networks, we show that inhibitory modulation in the alpha range (~ 10 Hz) can serve to temporally segment the visual information to prevent information overload. Coupled excitatory and inhibitory neurons generate a gamma rhythm in which information is segmented and sorted according to excitability in each alpha cycle. Further details are coded by distributed neuronal firing patterns within each gamma cycle. The network model produces coupling between alpha phase and gamma (40-100 Hz) amplitude in the simulated local field potential similar to that observed experimentally in human and animal recordings.

Original publication

DOI

10.1111/ejn.13318

Type

Journal article

Journal

Eur J Neurosci

Publication Date

08/2016

Volume

44

Pages

2147 - 2161

Keywords

alpha, gamma, modelling, neural oscillations, phase-amplitude coupling, Action Potentials, Animals, Computer Simulation, Gamma Rhythm, Humans, Interneurons, Models, Neurological, Neurons