4.8 Article

The Hidden Spatial Dimension of Alpha: 10-Hz Perceptual Echoes Propagate as Periodic Traveling Waves in the Human Brain

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 26, Issue 2, Pages 374-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2018.12.058

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Funding

  1. ERC Consolidator Grant-P-CYCLES [614244]

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EEG reverse-correlation techniques have revealed that visual information processing entails a similar to 10-Hz (alpha) occipital response that reverberates sensory inputs up to 1 s. However, the spatial distribution of these perceptual echoes remains unknown: are they synchronized across the brain, or do they propagate like a traveling wave? Here, in two experiments with varying stimulus locations, we demonstrate the systematic phase propagation of perceptual echoes. A single stimulation in the upper visual field produced an echo traveling wave propagating from posterior to frontal sensors. The simultaneous presentation of two independent stimuli in separate visual hemifields produced two superimposed traveling waves propagating in opposite directions. Strikingly, in each sensor, the phase of the two echoes differed, with a phase advance for the contralateral stimulus. Thus, alpha traveling waves sweep across the human brain, encoding stimulus position in the phase domain, in line with the 70-year-old cortical scanning hypothesis (Pitts and McCulloch, 1947).

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