Salle 5, Site Marcelin Berthelot
En libre accès, dans la limite des places disponibles
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Consciousness has been proposed to emerge from functionally integrated large-scale ensembles of gamma-synchronous neural populations that form and dissolve at a frequency in the theta band. I will discuss the proposal that discrete moments of perceptual experience are implemented by transient gamma-band synchronization of relevant cortical regions, and that disintegration and reintegration of these assemblies is time-locked to ongoing theta oscillations. In support of this hypothesis I will provide evidence that :

  • perceptual switching during binocular rivalry is time-locked to gamma-band synchronizations that recur at a theta rate, indicating that the onset of new conscious percepts coincides with the emergence of a new gamma-synchronous assembly that is locked to an ongoing theta rhythm;
  • localization of the generators of these gamma rhythms reveals recurrent prefrontal and parietal sources;
  • theta modulation of gamma-band synchronization is observed between and within the activated brain regions.

These results suggest that ongoing theta-modulated-gamma synchronization mechanisms periodically reintegrate a large-scale prefrontal-parietal network critical for perceptual experience. Moreover, activation and network inclusion of inferior temporal cortex and motor cortex uniquely occurs on the cycle immediately preceding a response signaling perceptual switching. This suggests that the essential prefrontal-parietal oscillatory network is expanded to include additional cortical regions relevant to tasks and perceptions furnishing consciousness at that moment, in this case image processing and response initiation.