Litcius/Paper detail

Over and above frequency: Gamma oscillations as units of neural circuit operations

Antonio Fernández‐Ruiz, Anton Sirota, Vítor Lopes‐dos‐Santos, David Dupret

2023Neuron163 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Gamma oscillations (∼30-150 Hz) are widespread correlates of neural circuit functions. These network activity patterns have been described across multiple animal species, brain structures, and behaviors, and are usually identified based on their spectral peak frequency. Yet, despite intensive investigation, whether gamma oscillations implement causal mechanisms of specific brain functions or represent a general dynamic mode of neural circuit operation remains unclear. In this perspective, we review recent advances in the study of gamma oscillations toward a deeper understanding of their cellular mechanisms, neural pathways, and functional roles. We discuss that a given gamma rhythm does not per se implement any specific cognitive function but rather constitutes an activity motif reporting the cellular substrates, communication channels, and computational operations underlying information processing in its generating brain circuit. Accordingly, we propose shifting the attention from a frequency-based to a circuit-level definition of gamma oscillations.

Topics & Concepts

NeuroscienceNerve netBrain functionBiological neural networkRhythmComputer scienceBrain activity and meditationCognitionPerspective (graphical)Artificial neural networkPsychologyBiologyElectroencephalographyPhysicsArtificial intelligenceAcousticsNeural dynamics and brain functionPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchNeuroscience and Neural Engineering