Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Electroencephalography" Keyword-tagged Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Sound degradation type differentially affects neural indicators of cognitive workload and speech tracking Gagné N; Greenlaw KM; Coffey EBJ; 40412301
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Phase-Amplitude Coupling of NREM Sleep Oscillations Shows Between-Night Stability and is Related to Overnight Memory Gains Cross N; O' Byrne J; Weiner OM; Giraud J; Perrault AA; Dang-Vu TT; 40214027
PERFORM
3 PreVISE: an efficient virtual reality system for SEEG surgical planning Spiegler P; Abdelsalam H; Hellum O; Hadjinicolaou A; Weil AG; Xiao Y; 39735694
ENCS
4 Metrics for evaluation of automatic epileptogenic zone localization in intracranial electrophysiology Hrtonova V; Nejedly P; Travnicek V; Cimbalnik J; Matouskova B; Pail M; Peter-Derex L; Grova C; Gotman J; Halamek J; Jurak P; Brazdil M; Klimes P; Frauscher B; 39608298
SOH
5 A protocol for trustworthy EEG decoding with neural networks Borra D; Magosso E; Ravanelli M; 39549492
ENCS
6 SpeechBrain-MOABB: An open-source Python library for benchmarking deep neural networks applied to EEG signals Borra D; Paissan F; Ravanelli M; 39265481
ENCS
7 The neurophysiology of closed-loop auditory stimulation in sleep: A magnetoencephalography study Jourde HR; Merlo R; Brooks M; Rowe M; Coffey EBJ; 37675803
CONCORDIA
8 Dynamic networks differentiate the language ability of children with cochlear implants Koirala N; Deroche MLD; Wolfe J; Neumann S; Bien AG; Doan D; Goldbeck M; Muthuraman M; Gracco VL; 37409105
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Class imbalance should not throw you off balance: Choosing the right classifiers and performance metrics for brain decoding with imbalanced data Thölke P; Mantilla-Ramos YJ; Abdelhedi H; Maschke C; Dehgan A; Harel Y; Kemtur A; Mekki Berrada L; Sahraoui M; Young T; Bellemare Pépin A; El Khantour C; Landry M; Pascarella A; Hadid V; Combrisson E; O' Byrne J; Jerbi K; 37385392
IMAGING
10 Neurophysiology, Neuropsychology, and Epilepsy, in 2022: Hills We Have Climbed and Hills Ahead. Neurophysiology in epilepsy Frauscher B; Bénar CG; Engel JJ; Grova C; Jacobs J; Kahane P; Wiebe S; Zjilmans M; Dubeau F; 37119580
PERFORM
11 Electroencephalographic characteristics of children and adolescents with chronic musculoskeletal pain Ocay DD; Teel EF; Luo OD; Savignac C; Mahdid Y; Blain-Moraes S; Ferland CE; 36601627
HKAP
12 Alpha and beta neural oscillations differentially reflect age-related differences in bilateral coordination Shih PC; Steele CJ; Nikulin VV; Gundlach C; Kruse J; Villringer A; Sehm B; 33979705
PSYCHOLOGY
13 Fast oscillations >40 Hz localize the epileptogenic zone: An electrical source imaging study using high-density electroencephalography. Avigdor T, Abdallah C, von Ellenrieder N, Hedrich T, Rubino A, Lo Russo G, Bernhardt B, Nobili L, Grova C, Frauscher B 33450578
PERFORM
14 PASS: A Multimodal Database of Physical Activity and Stress for Mobile Passive Body/ Brain-Computer Interface Research Parent M; Albuquerque I; Tiwari A; Cassani R; Gagnon JF; Lafond D; Tremblay S; Falk TH; 33363449
PERFORM
15 Source imaging of deep-brain activity using the regional spatiotemporal Kalman filter Hamid L; Habboush N; Stern P; Japaridze N; Aydin Ü; Wolters CH; Claussen JC; Heute U; Stephani U; Galka A; Siniatchkin M; 33250282
PERFORM
16 Localization Accuracy of Distributed Inverse Solutions for Electric and Magnetic Source Imaging of Interictal Epileptic Discharges in Patients with Focal Epilepsy. Heers M, Chowdhury RA, Hedrich T, Dubeau F, Hall JA, Lina JM, Grova C, Kobayashi E 25609211
PERFORM
17 Sleep spindles may predict response to cognitive-behavioral therapy for chronic insomnia Dang-Vu TT; Hatch B; Salimi A; Mograss M; Boucetta S; O' Byrne J; Brandewinder M; Berthomier C; Gouin JP; 29157588
PERFORM

 

Title:Phase-Amplitude Coupling of NREM Sleep Oscillations Shows Between-Night Stability and is Related to Overnight Memory Gains
Authors:Cross NO'Byrne JWeiner OMGiraud JPerrault AADang-Vu TT
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40214027/
DOI:10.1111/ejn.70108
Publication:The European journal of neuroscience
Keywords:electroencephalographymemory consolidationphase‐amplitude couplingsleepslow oscillationsspindles
PMID:40214027 Category: Date Added:2025-04-11
Dept Affiliation: PERFORM
1 Department of Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
2 Centre de Recherche de l'Institut Universitaire de Gériatrie de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
3 PERFORM Centre and Centre for Studies in Behavioral Neurobiology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
4 School of Psychology, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, Australia.
5 Department of Psychology, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.
6 Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.
7 Department of Neurosciences, Université de Montréal, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

There is growing evidence in humans linking the temporal coupling between spindles and slow oscillations during NREM sleep with the overnight stabilization of memories encoded from daytime experiences in humans. However, whether the type and strength of learning influence that relationship is still unknown. Here we tested whether the amount or type of verbal word-pair learning prior to sleep affects subsequent phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) between spindles and slow oscillations (SO). We measured the strength and preferred timing of such coupling in the EEG of 41 healthy human participants over a post-learning and control night to compare intra-individual changes with inter-individual differences. We leveraged learning paradigms of varying word-pair (WP) load: 40 WP learned to a minimum criterion of 60% correct (n = 11); 40 WP presented twice (n = 15); 120 WP presented twice (n = 15). There were no significant differences in the preferred phase or strength between the control and post-learning nights, in all learning conditions. We observed an overnight consolidation effect (improved performance at delayed recall) for the criterion learning condition only, and only in this condition was the overnight change in memory performance significantly positively correlated with the phase of SO-spindle coupling. These results suggest that the coupling of brain oscillations during human NREM sleep is stable traits that are not modulated by the amount of pre-sleep learning, yet are implicated in the sleep-dependent consolidation of memory-especially when overnight gains in memory are observed.





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