A General Framework for Dynamic Cortical Function: The Function-through-Biased-Oscillations (FBO) Hypothesis

Abstract

A central goal of neuroscience is to determine how the brain's relatively static anatomy can support dynamic cortical function, i.e., cortical function that varies according to task demands. In pursuit of this goal, scientists have produced a large number of experimental results and established influential conceptual frameworks, in particular communication-through-coherence (CTC) and gating-by-inhibition (GBI), but these data and frameworks have not provided a parsimonious view of the principles that underlie cortical function. Here I synthesize these existing experimental results and the CTC and GBI frameworks, and propose the function-through-biased-oscillations (FBO) hypothesis as a model to understand dynamic cortical function. The FBO hypothesis suggests that oscillatory voltage amplitude is the principal measurement that directly reflects cortical excitability, that asymmetries in voltage amplitude explain a range of brain signal phenomena, and that predictive variations in such asymmetric oscillations provide a simple and general model for information routing that can help to explain dynamic cortical function.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Jun 16, 2015
Accession Number
AD1069860

Entities

People

  • Gerwin Schalk

Organizations

  • New York State Department of Health

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Anatomy
  • Brain
  • Broadband
  • Cerebral Cortex
  • Cognitive Science
  • Electroencephalography
  • Frequency
  • Frequency Bands
  • Health Services
  • Measurement
  • Modulation
  • Neurosciences
  • Neurotechnology
  • New York
  • Observation
  • Visual Cortex
  • Voltage

Readers

  • Agent-Based Social Robotics and Mobile-Assisted Learning in Virtual Environments.
  • Neuroscience
  • Structural Dynamics.

Technology Areas

  • AI & ML
  • AI & ML - Bayesian Inference