ePoster

DEEP BRAIN STIMULATION RESHAPES THALAMIC DYNAMICAL TIMESCALES DURING GOAL-DIRECTED MOTOR CONTROL

Michael Benderand 8 co-authors

University of Florida

FENS Forum 2026 (2026)
Barcelona, Spain
Board PS04-08PM-481

Presentation

Date TBA

Board: PS04-08PM-481

Poster preview

DEEP BRAIN STIMULATION RESHAPES THALAMIC DYNAMICAL TIMESCALES DURING GOAL-DIRECTED MOTOR CONTROL poster preview

Event Information

Poster Board

PS04-08PM-481

Abstract

Deep brain stimulation (DBS) alleviates pathological motor symptoms in neurologically impaired subjects, yet its circuit-level mechanisms of action remain unclear. We hypothesized that cerebellum- and basal ganglia–receiving thalamic motor nuclei implement the functional factorization required by active inference: cerebellar-recipient motor thalamus (VLp-like domains) conveys predictive content, whereas basal ganglia–recipient motor thalamus (VLa/VA/VM-like domains) regulates precision via thalamocortical gain control. We tested this framework using dynamical and spectral analyses of human thalamic local field potentials (LFPs) recorded from contralateral ventral intermediate (VIM) and ventral oralis (VO) leads during three force-control paradigms. Trials were segmented into Plan, Delay, and Active epochs based on instruction and go cue onsets followed by force control. Intrinsic dynamical timescales were estimated using state-space models, yielding epoch- and stimulation-specific time constants (τ) related to spectral knee frequencies. Across all paradigms, VIM stimulation significantly reduced τ in both VO and VIM recordings relative to DBS-Off, indicating increased damping, whereas VO stimulation produced intermediate effects. Oscillatory amplitudes quantified via band-limited Hilbert envelopes showed selective modulation of frequency bands in VIM and VO, driven primarily by differences between rest and task engagement rather than between task epochs. Together, these findings indicate that DBS primarily reshapes intrinsic thalamic dynamics, with more limited, band-specific effects on oscillatory amplitude. The consistent reduction of thalamic time constants under VIM stimulation supports DBS as a control input that increases effective damping of belief dynamics, consistent with a precision-weighting mechanism that scales prediction’s influence on action selection and execution.

Recommended posters

ESSENTIAL TREMOR BEYOND OSCILLATIONS: THALAMIC SIGNATURES OF PREDICTIVE AND PRECISION PROCESSING AS CIRCUIT-SPECIFIC BIOMARKERS OF MOTOR CONTROL

Iva Durdanovic, Michael Bender, Nisrine Bakri, Lauren Goldman, Adolfo Ramirez-Zamora, David Vaillancourt, Stephen Coombes, Kelly Foote, Karim Oweiss

A PROOF-OF-CONCEPT STUDY OF DBS SENSING FOR COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE

Malte Lau Petersen, Simon Arvin, Louise Svarer, Mikkel Petersen, Felix Deilmann, Wanjun Lin, Jens Christian Hedemann Sørensen, Andreas Glud, Dan Bang

CEREBELLAR CONTROL OF CORTICO STRIATAL PLASTICITY & THERAPEUTIC CEREBELLAR DEEP BRAIN STIMULATIONS IN DYSTONIA

Maria Patricia Anez, Romain Sala, Clément Léna, Daniela Popa

SUB-SECOND DOPAMINE FLUCTUATIONS IN HUMAN THALAMUS DURING AUDITORY-MOTOR SYNCHRONISATION

Felix Deilmann, Johannes Rambøll, Simon Arvin, Malte Lau Petersen, Wanjun Lin, Louise Svarer, Seth R Batten, Leonardo S Barbosa, Jason P White, Terry Lohrenz, Gastón Schechtmann, Bo Bergholt, Hamed Zaer, Jens Christian Hedemann Sørensen, Pendleton Read Montague, Andreas N Glud, Jonathan Cannon, Dan Bang

ROLE OF NEURONAL OSCILLATIONS IN HUMAN THALAMUS AND SUBTHALAMIC NUCLEUS IN EVIDENCE INTEGRATION AND MOTOR EXECUTION DURING PERCEPTUAL DECISION-MAKING

Simon Arvin, Wanjun Lin, Malte Lau Petersen, Louse Høj Svarer, Hamed Zaer, Bo Bergholt, Gaston Schechtmann, Jens Christian Hedemann Sørensen, Seth R. Batten, Pendleton Read Montague, Andreas Nørgaard Glud, Dan Bang

ACUTE ANT-DBS RECONFIGURES SCALP EEG SPECTRA AND APERIODIC DYNAMICS: REPRODUCIBLE ON–OFF EFFECTS ACROSS YEARS

Elaheh Sabbaghi, Herkko Mattila, Jari Hyttinen, Jukka Peltola, Narayan Puthanmadam Subramaniyam

Cookies

We use essential cookies to run the site. Analytics cookies are optional and help us improve World Wide. Learn more.