New perspectives in brain information processing

AUTOR(ES)
FONTE

Springer Netherlands

RESUMO

Brain cortex activity, as variously recorded by scalp or cortical electrodes in the electroencephalography (EEG) frequency range, probably reflects the basic strategy of brain information processing. Various hypotheses have been advanced to interpret this phenomenon, the most popular of which is that suitable combinations of excitatory and inhibitory neurons behave as assemblies of oscillators susceptible to synchronization and desynchronization. Implicit in this view is the assumption that EEG potentials are epiphenomena of action potentials, which is consistent with the argument that voltage variations in dendritic membranes reproduce the postsynaptic effects of targeting neurons. However, this classic argument does not really fit the discovery that firing synchronization over extended brain areas often appears to be established in about 1 ms, which is a small fraction of any EEG frequency component period. This is in contrast with the fact that all computational models of dynamic systems formed by more or less weakly interacting oscillators of near frequencies take more than one period to reach synchronization. The discovery that the somatodendritic membranes of specialized populations of neurons exhibit intrinsic subthreshold oscillations (ISOs) in the EEG frequency range, together with experimental evidence that short inhibitory stimuli are capable of resetting ISO phases, radically changes the scheme described above and paves the way to a novel view. This paper aims to elucidate the nature of ISO generation mechanisms, to explain the reasons for their reliability in starting and stopping synchronized firing, and to indicate their potential in brain information processing. The need for a repertoire of extraneuronal regulation mechanisms, putatively mediated by astrocytes, is also inferred. Lastly, the importance of ISOs for the brain as a parallel recursive machine is briefly discussed.

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