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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Interacting spiral wave patterns underlie complex brain dynamics and are related to cognitive processing

Pulin Gong

Prof

The University of Sydney

Schedule
Friday, August 11, 2023

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Schedule

Saturday, August 12, 2023

4:00 AM Australia/Sydney

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Host: Sydney Systems Neuroscience and Complexity SNAC

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Recording provided by the organiser.

Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

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Host

Sydney Systems Neuroscience and Complexity SNAC

Duration

60 minutes

Abstract

The large-scale activity of the human brain exhibits rich and complex patterns, but the spatiotemporal dynamics of these patterns and their functional roles in cognition remain unclear. Here by characterizing moment-by-moment fluctuations of human cortical functional magnetic resonance imaging signals, we show that spiral-like, rotational wave patterns (brain spirals) are widespread during both resting and cognitive task states. These brain spirals propagate across the cortex while rotating around their phase singularity centres, giving rise to spatiotemporal activity dynamics with non-stationary features. The properties of these brain spirals, such as their rotational directions and locations, are task relevant and can be used to classify different cognitive tasks. We also demonstrate that multiple, interacting brain spirals are involved in coordinating the correlated activations and de-activations of distributed functional regions; this mechanism enables flexible reconfiguration of task-driven activity flow between bottom-up and top-down directions during cognitive processing. Our findings suggest that brain spirals organize complex spatiotemporal dynamics of the human brain and have functional correlates to cognitive processing.

Topics

activity flowbrain dynamicscognitioncomputational neurosciencecortical activitynon-stationary featuresphase singularityspiral wave patternstask relevance

About the Speaker

Pulin Gong

Prof

The University of Sydney

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.sydney.edu.au/science/about/our-people/academic-staff/pulin-gong.html

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