皮質脳波進行波に基づく選択的情報伝搬の仕組みを発見

ad

2026-01-15 京都大学

京都大学を中心とする共同研究グループは、認知課題遂行中の皮質脳波(ECoG)に現れる進行波を解析し、脳内の選択的情報伝搬の新たな仕組みを明らかにした。大域的な脳波進行波は課題内容に依存せず前方から後方へ一定の位相勾配を示す一方、課題に関与する脳部位では、局所脳波と進行波との同期の強さが課題に応じて変化することが分かった。これは、同一の大域的進行波の上で、局所的な同期調節により必要な情報のみが選択的に伝搬される可能性を示す成果である。本知見は頭皮脳波解析にも応用可能で、大脳皮質における大域的情報伝搬を評価する新指標の開発が期待される。

皮質脳波進行波に基づく選択的情報伝搬の仕組みを発見

<関連情報>

画像命名課題および手首伸展課題中の電気皮質図振動における、課題不変の前後方向大規模位相勾配 Task-invariant anterior-to-posterior large-scale phase gradients of electrocorticogram oscillations during picture naming and wrist extension

Naoyuki Sato,Akihiro Shimotake,Mayumi Otani,Takayuki Kikuchi,Takeharu Kunieda,Ryosuke Takahashi,Akio Ikeda & Riki Matsumoto
Communications Biology  Published:20 December 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-025-09362-4 An unedited version of this manuscript

Abstract

Electrocorticogram (ECoG) recordings during rest have shown that theta and alpha oscillations on the cortical surface form “cortical traveling waves” across large-scale brain networks, known as phase gradients. Theoretically, these large-scale phase gradients are thought to contribute to asymmetric coupling among cortical regions. During cognitive tasks, such large-scale gradients presumably support flexible information transfer between task-related cortices; however, this has not been extensively evaluated. Here, we examined the large-scale phase gradients of ECoG theta–alpha (7 Hz) oscillations during picture naming and wrist extension tasks. Notably, large-scale anterior-posterior phase gradients that spontaneously appeared from the anterior temporal lobe (ATL) to posterior regions were only weakly dependent on task type. Nonetheless, the degree of synchronization (termed “relative phase polarity”) in task-relevant regions was significantly modulated after stimulus and movement onsets. Moreover, increased local synchronization to the traveling waves was associated with enhanced phase-dependent high-gamma activity, possibly reflecting information processing within these areas. These results suggest that task-invariant anterior-to-posterior phase gradients continuously support asymmetric coupling within a widely distributed cortical network involving the ATL and other regions and that this coupling is regulated by task-relevant regions through modulation of their local synchrony with the traveling waves.

医療・健康
ad
ad
Follow
ad
タイトルとURLをコピーしました