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Precise spatial tuning of visually driven alpha oscillations in human visual cortex

Medicine and Health

Precise spatial tuning of visually driven alpha oscillations in human visual cortex

K. Yuasa, I. I. Groen, et al.

Using intracranial electrodes in human patients, this study shows that local increases in alpha power during visual stimulation reflect a mix of decreased alpha oscillatory power and increased broadband power; separating these components revealed alpha receptive fields that are larger, negatively tuned, and precisely suppressed by stimuli—explaining features of exogenous visual attention. This research was conducted by Authors present in <Authors> tag.... show more
Abstract
Neuronal oscillations at about 10 Hz, called alpha oscillations, are often thought to arise from synchronous activity across the occipital cortex and are usually largest when the cortex is inactive. However, recent studies measuring visual receptive fields have reported that local alpha power increases when cortex is excited by visual stimulation. This contrasts with the expectation that alpha oscillations are associated with cortical inactivity. Here, we used intracranial electrodes in human patients to measure alpha oscillations in response to visual stimuli whose location varied systematically across the visual field. We hypothesized that stimulus-driven local increases in alpha power result from a mixture of two effects: a reduction in alpha oscillatory power and a simultaneous increase in broadband power. To test this, we implemented a model to separate these components. The two components were then independently fit by population receptive field (pRF) models. We find that the alpha pRFs have similar center locations to pRFs estimated from broadband power but are several times larger and exhibit the opposite effect: alpha oscillatory power decreases in response to stimuli within the receptive field, reinforcing the link between alpha oscillations and cortical inactivity, whereas broadband power increases. The results demonstrate that alpha suppression in the human visual cortex can be precisely tuned, but that to measure these effects, it is essential to separate the oscillatory signal from broadband power changes. Finally, we show how the large size and the negative valence of alpha pRFs can explain key features of exogenous visual attention.
Publisher
eLife
Published On
Jun 13, 2025
Authors
Kenichi Yuasa, Iris IA Groen, Giovanni Piantoni, Stephanie Montenegro, Adeen Flinker, Sasha Devore, Orrin Devinsky, Werner Doyle, Patricia Dugan, Daniel Friedman, Nick F Ramsey, Natalia Petridou, Jonathan Winawer
Tags
alpha oscillations
broadband power
population receptive field (pRF)
intracranial electrodes
visual cortex
receptive field tuning
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