Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.

Oscillations form a ubiquitous feature of the central nervous system. Evidence is accruing from cortical and sub-cortical recordings that these rhythms may be functionally important, although the precise details of their roles remain unclear. The basal ganglia share this predilection for rhythmic ac...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brittain, J, Brown, P
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: 2014
_version_ 1826302365065543680
author Brittain, J
Brown, P
author_facet Brittain, J
Brown, P
author_sort Brittain, J
collection OXFORD
description Oscillations form a ubiquitous feature of the central nervous system. Evidence is accruing from cortical and sub-cortical recordings that these rhythms may be functionally important, although the precise details of their roles remain unclear. The basal ganglia share this predilection for rhythmic activity which, as we see in Parkinson's disease, becomes further enhanced in the dopamine depleted state. While certain cortical rhythms appear to penetrate the basal ganglia, others are transformed or blocked. Here, we discuss the functional association of oscillations in the basal ganglia and their relationship with cortical activity. We further explore the neural underpinnings of such oscillatory activity, including the important balance to be struck between facilitating information transmission and limiting information coding capacity. Finally, we introduce the notion that synchronised oscillatory activity can be broadly categorised as immutability promoting rhythms that reinforce incumbent processes, and mutability promoting rhythms that favour novel processing.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T05:46:27Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:e762f8b3-672d-417a-92e6-a12a1589039d
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T05:46:27Z
publishDate 2014
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:e762f8b3-672d-417a-92e6-a12a1589039d2022-03-27T10:38:12ZOscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:e762f8b3-672d-417a-92e6-a12a1589039dEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2014Brittain, JBrown, POscillations form a ubiquitous feature of the central nervous system. Evidence is accruing from cortical and sub-cortical recordings that these rhythms may be functionally important, although the precise details of their roles remain unclear. The basal ganglia share this predilection for rhythmic activity which, as we see in Parkinson's disease, becomes further enhanced in the dopamine depleted state. While certain cortical rhythms appear to penetrate the basal ganglia, others are transformed or blocked. Here, we discuss the functional association of oscillations in the basal ganglia and their relationship with cortical activity. We further explore the neural underpinnings of such oscillatory activity, including the important balance to be struck between facilitating information transmission and limiting information coding capacity. Finally, we introduce the notion that synchronised oscillatory activity can be broadly categorised as immutability promoting rhythms that reinforce incumbent processes, and mutability promoting rhythms that favour novel processing.
spellingShingle Brittain, J
Brown, P
Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.
title Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.
title_full Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.
title_fullStr Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.
title_full_unstemmed Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.
title_short Oscillations and the basal ganglia: motor control and beyond.
title_sort oscillations and the basal ganglia motor control and beyond
work_keys_str_mv AT brittainj oscillationsandthebasalgangliamotorcontrolandbeyond
AT brownp oscillationsandthebasalgangliamotorcontrolandbeyond