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Estimating Repetitive Spatiotemporal Patterns

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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Estimating repetitive spatiotemporal patterns from resting-state brain activity data

Yusuke Takeda

Dr

Computational Brain Dynamics Team, RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project, Japan; Department of Computational Brain Imaging, ATR Neural Information Analysis Laboratories, Japan

Schedule
Thursday, April 27, 2023

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Thursday, April 27, 2023

10:00 AM Asia/Tokyo

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Host: Sydney Systems Neuroscience and Complexity SNAC

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Sydney Systems Neuroscience and Complexity SNAC

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Abstract

Repetitive spatiotemporal patterns in resting-state brain activities have been widely observed in various species and regions, such as rat and cat visual cortices. Since they resemble the preceding brain activities during tasks, they are assumed to reflect past experiences embedded in neuronal circuits. Moreover, spatiotemporal patterns involving whole-brain activities may also reflect a process that integrates information distributed over the entire brain, such as motor and visual information. Therefore, revealing such patterns may elucidate how the information is integrated to generate consciousness. In this talk, I will introduce our proposed method to estimate repetitive spatiotemporal patterns from resting-state brain activity data and show the spatiotemporal patterns estimated from human resting-state magnetoencephalography (MEG) and electroencephalography (EEG) data. Our analyses suggest that the patterns involved whole-brain propagating activities that reflected a process to integrate the information distributed over frequencies and networks. I will also introduce our current attempt to reveal signal flows and their roles in the spatiotemporal patterns using a big dataset. - Takeda et al., Estimating repetitive spatiotemporal patterns from resting-state brain activity data. NeuroImage (2016); 133:251-65. - Takeda et al., Whole-brain propagating patterns in human resting-state brain activities. NeuroImage (2021); 245:118711.

Topics

brain activityconsciousnessdynamicselectroencephalographyinformation integrationmagnetoencephalographyneuronal circuitsresting-state activitysignal flowsspatiotemporal patterns

About the Speaker

Yusuke Takeda

Dr

Computational Brain Dynamics Team, RIKEN Center for Advanced Intelligence Project, Japan; Department of Computational Brain Imaging, ATR Neural Information Analysis Laboratories, Japan

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

bicr.atr.jp/~takeda/index.html

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