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Full-Text Articles in Neurology
Theta And High-Frequency Activity Mark Spontaneous Recall Of Episodic Memories., John F Burke, Ashwini D Sharan, Michael R Sperling, Ashwin G Ramayya, James J. Evans, M Karl Healey, Erin N Beck, Kathryn A Davis, Timothy H Lucas, Michael J Kahana
Theta And High-Frequency Activity Mark Spontaneous Recall Of Episodic Memories., John F Burke, Ashwini D Sharan, Michael R Sperling, Ashwin G Ramayya, James J. Evans, M Karl Healey, Erin N Beck, Kathryn A Davis, Timothy H Lucas, Michael J Kahana
Department of Neurology Faculty Papers
Humans possess the remarkable ability to search their memory, allowing specific past episodes to be re-experienced spontaneously. Here, we administered a free recall test to 114 neurosurgical patients and used intracranial theta and high-frequency activity (HFA) to identify the spatiotemporal pattern of neural activity underlying spontaneous episodic retrieval. We found that retrieval evolved in three electrophysiological stages composed of: (1) early theta oscillations in the right temporal cortex, (2) increased HFA in the left hemisphere including the medial temporal lobe (MTL), left inferior frontal gyrus, as well as the ventrolateral temporal cortex, and (3) motor/language activation during vocalization of the …