17 results on '"Uday Agrawal"'
Search Results
2. Model-based physiological noise removal in fast fMRI.
- Author
-
Uday Agrawal, Emery N. Brown, and Laura D. Lewis
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Electroencephalographic features of discontinuous activity in anesthetized infants and children.
- Author
-
Uday Agrawal, Charles B Berde, and Laura Cornelissen
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BackgroundDiscontinuous electroencephalographic activity in children is thought to reflect brain inactivation. Discontinuity has been observed in states of pathology, where it is predictive of adverse neurological outcome, as well as under general anesthesia. Though in preterm-infants discontinuity reflects normal brain development, less is known regarding its role in term children, particularly in the setting of general anesthesia. Here, we conduct a post-hoc exploratory analysis to investigate the spectral features of discontinuous activity in children under general anesthesia.MethodsWe previously recorded electroencephalography in children less than forty months of age under general anesthesia (n = 65). We characterized the relationship between age, anesthetic depth, and discontinuous activity, and used multitaper spectral methods to compare the power spectra of subjects with (n = 35) and without (n = 30) discontinuous activity. In the subjects with discontinuous activity, we examined the amplitude and power spectra associated with the discontinuities and analyzed how these variables varied with age.ResultsCumulative time of discontinuity was associated with increased anesthetic depth and younger age. In particular, age-matched children with discontinuity received higher doses of propofol during induction as compared with children without discontinuity. In the tens of seconds preceding the onset of discontinuous activity, there was a decrease in high-frequency power in children four months and older that could be visually observed with spectrograms. During discontinuous activity, there were distinctive patterns of amplitude, spectral edge, and power in canonical frequency bands that varied with age. Notably, there was a decline in spectral edge in the seconds immediately following each discontinuity.ConclusionDiscontinuous activity in children reflects a state of a younger or more deeply anesthetized brain, and characteristic features of discontinuous activity evolve with age and may reflect neurodevelopment.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A Prospective Study of the Impact of Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation on EEG Correlates of Somatosensory Perception
- Author
-
Danielle D. Sliva, Christopher J. Black, Paul Bowary, Uday Agrawal, Juan F. Santoyo, Noah S. Philip, Benjamin D. Greenberg, Christopher I. Moore, and Stephanie R. Jones
- Subjects
transcranial alternating current stimulation ,somatosensory perception ,tactile detection ,alpha ,neuromodulation ,Psychology ,BF1-990 - Abstract
The (8–12 Hz) neocortical alpha rhythm is associated with shifts in attention across sensory systems, and is thought to represent a sensory gating mechanism for the inhibitory control of cortical processing. The present preliminary study sought to explore whether alpha frequency transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) could modulate endogenous alpha power in the somatosensory system, and whether the hypothesized modulation would causally impact perception of tactile stimuli at perceptual threshold. We combined electroencephalography (EEG) with simultaneous brief and intermittent tACS applied over primary somatosensory cortex at individuals’ endogenous alpha frequency during a tactile detection task (n = 12 for EEG, n = 20 for behavior). EEG-measured pre-stimulus alpha power was higher on non-perceived than perceived trials, and analogous perceptual correlates emerged in early components of the tactile evoked response. Further, baseline normalized tactile detection performance was significantly lower during alpha than sham tACS, but the effect did not last into the post-tACS time period. Pre- to post-tACS changes in alpha power were linearly dependent upon baseline state, such that alpha power tended to increase when pre-tACS alpha power was low, and decrease when it was high. However, these observations were comparable in both groups, and not associated with evidence of tACS-induced alpha power modulation. Nevertheless, the tactile stimulus evoked response potential (ERP) revealed a potentially lasting impact of alpha tACS on circuit dynamics. The post-tACS ERP was marked by the emergence of a prominent peak ∼70 ms post-stimulus, which was not discernible post-sham, or in either pre-stimulation condition. Computational neural modeling designed to simulate macroscale EEG signals supported the hypothesis that the emergence of this peak could reflect synaptic plasticity mechanisms induced by tACS. The primary lesson learned in this study, which commanded a small sample size, was that while our experimental paradigm provided some evidence of an influence of tACS on behavior and circuit dynamics, it was not sufficient to induce observable causal effects of tACS on EEG-measured alpha oscillations. We discuss limitations and suggest improvements that may help further delineate a causal influence of tACS on cortical dynamics and perception in future studies.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Therapeutic Considerations in Chronic Serotonin Syndrome: A Case Report
- Author
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Uday, Agrawal, primary, Yihang, Qi, additional, and Jingping, Wang, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Development and Deployment of an Open, Modular, Near-Real-Time Patient Monitor Datastream Conduit Toolkit to Enable Healthcare Multimodal Data Fusion in a Live Emergency Department Setting for Experimental Bedside Clinical Informatics Research
- Author
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Uday Agrawal, Derek Merck, Wael F. Asaad, Leo Kobayashi, Xiao Hu, Kenneth A. Loparo, Gregory D. Jay, Adewole Oyalowo, and Shyue-Ling Chen
- Subjects
Remote patient monitoring ,business.industry ,Computer science ,Search engine indexing ,Health technology ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Data science ,JSON ,Health informatics ,Visualization ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Resource (project management) ,Software deployment ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Electrical and Electronic Engineering ,business ,Instrumentation ,computer ,computer.programming_language - Abstract
Healthcare providers rely on complex biomedical devices to assess, treat, and monitor patients. Ongoing research efforts are attempting to generate and implement better algorithms and mechanisms to ensure the early, accurate, automated, and clinically meaningful recognition of patterns and changes in patient health and pathology. Effecting such evolutionary advances in patient monitoring will likely require large collections of high-resolution physiologic parameter datasets from a broad spectrum of patients. As part of a research program to scientifically improve patient monitoring (with a focus on alarm fatigue mitigation), investigators developed the Medical Technology Interface-Open/Research toolkit with modular conduit components that provide the following capabilities: 1) access to select bedside monitor physiologic signals in real-world clinical settings for near-real-time acquisition, storage, and export of high-resolution patient datastreams in a portable format (.json); 2) establishment of a safe, parallel test environment at the bedside for experimental datastream analyses in a research framework. Deployment and interfacing of toolkit elements with off-the-shelf software solutions in a live emergency department setting enabled the construction of a bedside clinical informatics (BCI) research pipeline infrastructure that featured 1) indexing, search/query, and retrieval of datastreams for sophisticated analyses, experimental processing, and algorithm development; and 2) dataset visualization for expert adjudication of datastream interpretability, alarm clinical significance and severity, and experimental algorithm performance. In order to help institute a collaborative biomedical engineering research resource, this article shares details of the active ED BCI data pipeline and presents preliminary examples of ongoing multimodal data fusion applications.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Model-based physiological noise removal in fast fMRI
- Author
-
Laura D. Lewis, Emery N. Brown, and Uday Agrawal
- Subjects
Adult ,Computer science ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Hemodynamics ,Harmonic regression ,computer.software_genre ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,Physiological noise ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Fast fMRI ,Voxel ,Aliasing ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,business.industry ,Functional Neuroimaging ,05 social sciences ,Autocorrelation ,Brain ,Pattern recognition ,Statistical model ,Models, Theoretical ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Communication noise ,Noise ,HRAN ,Neurology ,Autoregressive model ,Temporal resolution ,Simultaneous multislice (SMS) ,Artificial intelligence ,business ,computer ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
© 2019 The Author(s) Recent improvements in the speed and sensitivity of fMRI acquisition techniques suggest that fast fMRI can be used to detect and precisely localize sub-second neural dynamics. This enhanced temporal resolution has enormous potential for neuroscientists. However, physiological noise poses a major challenge for the analysis of fast fMRI data. Physiological noise scales with sensitivity, and its autocorrelation structure is altered in rapidly sampled data, suggesting that new approaches are needed for physiological noise removal in fast fMRI. Existing strategies either rely on external physiological recordings, which can be noisy or difficult to collect, or employ data-driven approaches which make assumptions that may not hold true in fast fMRI. We created a statistical model of harmonic regression with autoregressive noise (HRAN) to estimate and remove cardiac and respiratory noise from the fMRI signal directly. This technique exploits the fact that cardiac and respiratory noise signals are fully sampled (rather than aliasing) when imaging at fast rates, allowing us to track and model physiology over time without requiring external physiological measurements. We then created a joint model of neural hemodynamics, and physiological and autocorrelated noise to more accurately remove noise. We first verified that HRAN accurately estimates cardiac and respiratory dynamics and that our model demonstrates goodness-of-fit in fast fMRI data. In task-driven data, we then demonstrated that HRAN is able to remove physiological noise while leaving the neural signal intact, thereby increasing detection of task-driven voxels. Finally, we established that in both simulations and fast fMRI data HRAN is able to improve statistical inferences as compared with gold-standard physiological noise removal techniques. In conclusion, we created a tool that harnesses the novel information in fast fMRI to remove physiological noise, enabling broader use of the technology to study human brain function.
- Published
- 2020
8. Electroencephalographic features of discontinuous activity in anesthetized infants and children
- Author
-
Charles B. Berde, Uday Agrawal, and Laura Cornelissen
- Subjects
Male ,Younger age ,Physiology ,General Anesthesia ,Electroencephalography ,Classification of discontinuities ,Audiology ,Families ,0302 clinical medicine ,030202 anesthesiology ,Anesthesiology ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Anesthesia ,Child ,Children ,Clinical Neurophysiology ,Anesthesiology Monitoring ,Brain Mapping ,Multidisciplinary ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Pharmaceutics ,Brain ,Drugs ,Electrophysiology ,Bioassays and Physiological Analysis ,Brain Electrophysiology ,Engineering and Technology ,Medicine ,Female ,Propofol ,Infants ,Infant, Premature ,medicine.drug ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Brain development ,Imaging Techniques ,Science ,Neurophysiology ,Neuroimaging ,Anesthesia, General ,Research and Analysis Methods ,03 medical and health sciences ,Discontinuity (geotechnical engineering) ,Drug Therapy ,Multitaper ,medicine ,Humans ,Pain Management ,Electrodes ,Retrospective Studies ,Anesthetics ,Pharmacology ,business.industry ,Electrophysiological Techniques ,Infant, Newborn ,Infant ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Age Groups ,Anesthetic ,People and Places ,Population Groupings ,Clinical Medicine ,Electronics ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
BackgroundDiscontinuous electroencephalographic activity in children is thought to reflect brain inactivation. Discontinuity has been observed in states of pathology, where it is predictive of adverse neurological outcome, as well as under general anesthesia. Though in preterm-infants discontinuity reflects normal brain development, less is known regarding its role in term children, particularly in the setting of general anesthesia. Here, we conduct a post-hoc exploratory analysis to investigate the spectral features of discontinuous activity in children under general anesthesia.MethodsWe previously recorded electroencephalography in children less than forty months of age under general anesthesia (n = 65). We characterized the relationship between age, anesthetic depth, and discontinuous activity, and used multitaper spectral methods to compare the power spectra of subjects with (n = 35) and without (n = 30) discontinuous activity. In the subjects with discontinuous activity, we examined the amplitude and power spectra associated with the discontinuities and analyzed how these variables varied with age.ResultsCumulative time of discontinuity was associated with increased anesthetic depth and younger age. In particular, age-matched children with discontinuity received higher doses of propofol during induction as compared with children without discontinuity. In the tens of seconds preceding the onset of discontinuous activity, there was a decrease in high-frequency power in children four months and older that could be visually observed with spectrograms. During discontinuous activity, there were distinctive patterns of amplitude, spectral edge, and power in canonical frequency bands that varied with age. Notably, there was a decline in spectral edge in the seconds immediately following each discontinuity.ConclusionDiscontinuous activity in children reflects a state of a younger or more deeply anesthetized brain, and characteristic features of discontinuous activity evolve with age and may reflect neurodevelopment.
- Published
- 2019
9. A Prospective Study of the Impact of Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation on EEG Correlates of Somatosensory Perception
- Author
-
Juan F. Santoyo, Christopher J. Black, Danielle D. Sliva, Paul M Bowary, Benjamin D. Greenberg, Christopher I. Moore, Noah S. Philip, Stephanie R. Jones, and Uday Agrawal
- Subjects
somatosensory perception ,0301 basic medicine ,alpha ,media_common.quotation_subject ,lcsh:BF1-990 ,tactile detection ,Sensory system ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Electroencephalography ,Somatosensory system ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Perception ,medicine ,Psychology ,General Psychology ,Original Research ,media_common ,Transcranial alternating current stimulation ,transcranial alternating current stimulation ,Sensory gating ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,lcsh:Psychology ,030104 developmental biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,neuromodulation ,Synaptic plasticity ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
The (8–12 Hz) neocortical alpha rhythm is associated with shifts in attention across sensory systems, and is thought to represent a sensory gating mechanism for the inhibitory control of cortical processing. The present preliminary study sought to explore whether alpha frequency transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) could modulate endogenous alpha power in the somatosensory system, and whether the hypothesized modulation would causally impact perception of tactile stimuli at perceptual threshold. We combined electroencephalography (EEG) with simultaneous brief and intermittent tACS applied over primary somatosensory cortex at individuals’ endogenous alpha frequency during a tactile detection task (n = 12 for EEG, n = 20 for behavior). EEG-measured pre-stimulus alpha power was higher on non-perceived than perceived trials, and analogous perceptual correlates emerged in early components of the tactile evoked response. Further, baseline normalized tactile detection performance was significantly lower during alpha than sham tACS, but the effect did not last into the post-tACS time period. Pre- to post-tACS changes in alpha power were linearly dependent upon baseline state, such that alpha power tended to increase when pre-tACS alpha power was low, and decrease when it was high. However, these observations were comparable in both groups, and not associated with evidence of tACS-induced alpha power modulation. Nevertheless, the tactile stimulus evoked response potential (ERP) revealed a potentially lasting impact of alpha tACS on circuit dynamics. The post-tACS ERP was marked by the emergence of a prominent peak ∼70 ms post-stimulus, which was not discernible post-sham, or in either pre-stimulation condition. Computational neural modeling designed to simulate macroscale EEG signals supported the hypothesis that the emergence of this peak could reflect synaptic plasticity mechanisms induced by tACS. The primary lesson learned in this study, which commanded a small sample size, was that while our experimental paradigm provided some evidence of an influence of tACS on behavior and circuit dynamics, it was not sufficient to induce observable causal effects of tACS on EEG-measured alpha oscillations. We discuss limitations and suggest improvements that may help further delineate a causal influence of tACS on cortical dynamics and perception in future studies.
- Published
- 2018
10. The effects of Tai Chi practice on intermuscular beta coherence and the rubber hand illusion
- Author
-
Uday Agrawal, Sandeep M. Nayak, and Catherine E. Kerr
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,intermuscular coherence ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Illusion ,Sensory system ,Electromyography ,Audiology ,Body awareness ,Somatosensory system ,Tai Chi ,050105 experimental psychology ,lcsh:RC321-571 ,03 medical and health sciences ,Behavioral Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,EMG ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Beta Rhythm ,lcsh:Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,Biological Psychiatry ,media_common ,Original Research ,embodiment ,Sensory stimulation therapy ,Proprioception ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,rubber hand illusion ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Neurology ,business ,Neuroscience ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Tai Chi (TC) is a slow-motion contemplative exercise that is associated with improvements in sensorimotor measures, including decreased force variability, enhanced tactile acuity, and improved proprioception, especially in elderly populations. Here, we carried out two studies evaluating the effect of TC practice on measures associated with sensorimotor processing. In study 1, we evaluated TC's effects on an oscillatory parameter associated with motor function, beta rhythm (15-30 Hz) coherence, focusing specifically on beta rhythm intermuscular coherence (IMC), which is tightly coupled to beta corticomuscular coherence (CMC). We utilized electromyography (EMG) to compare beta IMC in older TC practitioners with age-matched controls, as well as novices with advanced TC practitioners. Given previous findings of elevated, maladaptive beta coherence in older subjects, we hypothesized that increased TC practice would be associated with a monotonic decrease in beta IMC, but rather discovered that novice practitioners manifested higher beta IMC than both controls and advanced practitioners, forming an inverted U-shaped practice curve. This finding suggests that TC practice elicits complex changes in sensory and motor processes over the developmental lifespan of TC training. In study 2, we focused on somatosensory (e.g., tactile and proprioceptive) responses to the rubber hand illusion (RHI) in a middle-aged TC group, assessing whether responses to the illusion became dampened with greater cumulative practice. As hypothesized, TC practice was associated with decreased likelihood to misattribute tactile stimulation during the RHI to the rubber hand, although there was no effect of TC practice on measures of proprioception or on subjective reports of ownership. These studies provide preliminary evidence that TC practice both modulates beta network coherence in a non-linear fashion, perhaps as a result of the focus on not only efferent motor but also afferent sensory activity, and alters tactile sensations during the RHI. This work is the first to show the effects of TC on low level sensorimotor processing and integrated body awareness, and this multi-scale finding may help to provide a mechanistic explanation for the widespread sensorimotor benefits observed with TC practice in symptoms associated with aging and difficult illnesses such as Parkinson's disease.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Open Ephys electroencephalography (Open Ephys + EEG): a modular, low-cost, open-source solution to human neural recording
- Author
-
Uday Agrawal, Max Ladow, Jakob Voigts, Christopher J. Black, Stephanie R. Jones, Christopher I. Moore, and Juan F. Santoyo
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Computer science ,Interface (computing) ,Real-time computing ,Biomedical Engineering ,ComputerApplications_COMPUTERSINOTHERSYSTEMS ,Electroencephalography ,Sensitivity and Specificity ,Extensibility ,Article ,User-Computer Interface ,03 medical and health sciences ,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience ,0302 clinical medicine ,Software ,medicine ,Humans ,Diagnosis, Computer-Assisted ,Protocol (object-oriented programming) ,Simulation ,Signal processing ,Amplifiers, Electronic ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,End user ,business.industry ,Brain ,Reproducibility of Results ,Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Equipment Design ,Modular design ,Equipment Failure Analysis ,ComputingMethodologies_PATTERNRECOGNITION ,030104 developmental biology ,Head Protective Devices ,business ,Algorithms ,Analog-Digital Conversion ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Electroencephalography (EEG) offers a unique opportunity to study human neural activity non-invasively with millisecond resolution using minimal equipment in or outside of a lab setting. EEG can be combined with a number of techniques for closed-loop experiments, where external devices are driven by specific neural signals. For example, EEG signals have been used to regulate anesthetic delivery, to control brain-computer interfaces, and to drive transcranial alternating current stimulation for the treatment of psychiatric illness. However, reliable, commercially available EEG systems are expensive, often making them impractical for individual use and research development. Moreover, by design, a majority of these systems cannot be easily altered to the specification needed by the end user. This rigidity makes it extremely difficult or infeasible to adapt EEG to novel closed-loop experiments. For instance, many current systems are not able to communicate with software and hardware from other vendors, nor are they able to achieve low-latency timescales (100 ms) necessary to operate on the fast patterns of neural activities. Recently, open-source alternatives to commercial systems have been developed that can eliminate these problems, driving down research costs and promoting collaborations and innovations. Here, we present methods to expand the use of a commercially available, open-source electrophysiology system, Open Ephys (www.openephys.org), to include human EEG recordings providing a novel technique for low-cost, easily-adaptable EEG recording. We describe the equipment and protocol necessary to interface various EEG caps with the Open Ephys acquisition board, and detail methods for processing data. We present applications of Open Ephys + EEG as a research tool and discuss how this innovative EEG technology lays a framework for improved closed-loop paradigms and novel brain-computer interface experiments.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Open Ephys electroencephalography (Open Ephys + EEG): a modular, low-cost, open-source solution to human neural recording.
- Author
-
Christopher Black, Jakob Voigts, Uday Agrawal, Max Ladow, Juan Santoyo, Christopher Moore, and Stephanie Jones
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. A Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial Comparing Effects of Qigong and Exercise/Nutrition Training on Fatigue and Other Outcomes in Female Cancer Survivors.
- Author
-
Zimmerman, Chloe S., Temereanca, Simona, Daniels, Dylan, Penner, Cooper, Cannonier, Tariq, Jones, Stephanie R., and Kerr, Catherine
- Abstract
Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is a common and burdensome, often long-term side effect of cancer and its treatment. Many non-pharmacological treatments have been investigated as possible CRF therapies, including exercise, nutrition, health/psycho-education, and mind-body therapies. However, studies directly comparing the efficacy of these treatments in randomized controlled trials are lacking. To fill this gap, we conducted a parallel single blind randomized controlled pilot efficacy trial with women with CRF to directly compare the effects of Qigong (a form of mind-body intervention) (n = 11) to an intervention that combined strength and aerobic exercise, plant-based nutrition and health/psycho-education (n = 13) in a per protocol analysis. This design was chosen to determine the comparative efficacy of 2 non-pharmacologic interventions, with different physical demand intensities, in reducing the primary outcome measure of self-reported fatigue (FACIT "Additional Concerns" subscale). Both interventions showed a mean fatigue improvement of more than double the pre-established minimal clinically important difference of 3 (qigong: 7.068 ± 10.30, exercise/nutrition: 8.846 ± 12.001). Mixed effects ANOVA analysis of group × time interactions revealed a significant main effect of time, such that both groups significantly improved fatigue from pre-to post-treatment (F(1,22) = 11.898, P = .002, generalized eta squared effect size = 0.116) There was no significant difference between fatigue improvement between groups (independent samples ttest: P = .70), suggesting a potential equivalence or non-inferiority of interventions, which we could not definitively establish due to our small sample size. This study provides evidence from a small sample of n = 24 women with CRF that qigong improves fatigue similarly to exercise-nutrition courses. Qigong additionally significantly improved secondary measures of mood, emotion regulation, and stress, while exercise/nutrition significantly improved secondary measures of sleep/fatigue. These findings provide preliminary evidence for divergent mechanisms of fatigue improvement across interventions, with qigong providing a gentler and lower-intensity alternative to exercise/nutrition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Electroencephalographic features of discontinuous activity in anesthetized infants and children.
- Author
-
Agrawal, Uday, Berde, Charles B., and Cornelissen, Laura
- Subjects
GENERAL anesthesia ,INFANTS ,POWER spectra ,INFANT development ,NEURAL development ,LIFE sciences - Abstract
Background: Discontinuous electroencephalographic activity in children is thought to reflect brain inactivation. Discontinuity has been observed in states of pathology, where it is predictive of adverse neurological outcome, as well as under general anesthesia. Though in preterm-infants discontinuity reflects normal brain development, less is known regarding its role in term children, particularly in the setting of general anesthesia. Here, we conduct a post-hoc exploratory analysis to investigate the spectral features of discontinuous activity in children under general anesthesia. Methods: We previously recorded electroencephalography in children less than forty months of age under general anesthesia (n = 65). We characterized the relationship between age, anesthetic depth, and discontinuous activity, and used multitaper spectral methods to compare the power spectra of subjects with (n = 35) and without (n = 30) discontinuous activity. In the subjects with discontinuous activity, we examined the amplitude and power spectra associated with the discontinuities and analyzed how these variables varied with age. Results: Cumulative time of discontinuity was associated with increased anesthetic depth and younger age. In particular, age-matched children with discontinuity received higher doses of propofol during induction as compared with children without discontinuity. In the tens of seconds preceding the onset of discontinuous activity, there was a decrease in high-frequency power in children four months and older that could be visually observed with spectrograms. During discontinuous activity, there were distinctive patterns of amplitude, spectral edge, and power in canonical frequency bands that varied with age. Notably, there was a decline in spectral edge in the seconds immediately following each discontinuity. Conclusion: Discontinuous activity in children reflects a state of a younger or more deeply anesthetized brain, and characteristic features of discontinuous activity evolve with age and may reflect neurodevelopment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A Prospective Study of the Impact of Transcranial Alternating Current Stimulation on EEG Correlates of Somatosensory Perception.
- Author
-
Sliva, Danielle D., Black, Christopher J., Bowary, Paul, Agrawal, Uday, Santoyo, Juan F., Philip, Noah S., Greenberg, Benjamin D., Moore, Christopher I., and Jones, Stephanie R.
- Subjects
TRANSCRANIAL alternating current stimulation ,ALPHA rhythm ,ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY ,LONGITUDINAL method ,SENSORY perception ,RESPONSE inhibition - Abstract
The (8–12 Hz) neocortical alpha rhythm is associated with shifts in attention across sensory systems, and is thought to represent a sensory gating mechanism for the inhibitory control of cortical processing. The present preliminary study sought to explore whether alpha frequency transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) could modulate endogenous alpha power in the somatosensory system, and whether the hypothesized modulation would causally impact perception of tactile stimuli at perceptual threshold. We combined electroencephalography (EEG) with simultaneous brief and intermittent tACS applied over primary somatosensory cortex at individuals' endogenous alpha frequency during a tactile detection task (n = 12 for EEG, n = 20 for behavior). EEG-measured pre-stimulus alpha power was higher on non-perceived than perceived trials, and analogous perceptual correlates emerged in early components of the tactile evoked response. Further, baseline normalized tactile detection performance was significantly lower during alpha than sham tACS, but the effect did not last into the post-tACS time period. Pre- to post-tACS changes in alpha power were linearly dependent upon baseline state, such that alpha power tended to increase when pre-tACS alpha power was low, and decrease when it was high. However, these observations were comparable in both groups, and not associated with evidence of tACS-induced alpha power modulation. Nevertheless, the tactile stimulus evoked response potential (ERP) revealed a potentially lasting impact of alpha tACS on circuit dynamics. The post-tACS ERP was marked by the emergence of a prominent peak ∼70 ms post-stimulus, which was not discernible post-sham, or in either pre-stimulation condition. Computational neural modeling designed to simulate macroscale EEG signals supported the hypothesis that the emergence of this peak could reflect synaptic plasticity mechanisms induced by tACS. The primary lesson learned in this study, which commanded a small sample size, was that while our experimental paradigm provided some evidence of an influence of tACS on behavior and circuit dynamics, it was not sufficient to induce observable causal effects of tACS on EEG-measured alpha oscillations. We discuss limitations and suggest improvements that may help further delineate a causal influence of tACS on cortical dynamics and perception in future studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Aesthetics of Religion : A Connective Concept
- Author
-
Alexandra K. Grieser, Jay Johnston, Alexandra K. Grieser, and Jay Johnston
- Subjects
- Senses and sensation--Religious aspects, Aesthetics--Religious aspects
- Abstract
This volume is the first English language presentation of the innovative approaches developed in the aesthetics of religion. The chapters present diverse material and detailed analysis on descriptive, methodological and theoretical concepts that together explore the potential of an aesthetic approach for investigating religion as a sensory and mediated practice. In dialogue with, yet different from, other major movements in the field (material culture, anthropology of the senses, for instance), it is the specific intent of this approach to create a framework for understanding the interplay between sensory, cognitive and socio-cultural aspects of world-construction. The volume demonstrates that aesthetics, as a theory of sensory knowledge, offers an elaborate repertoire of concepts that can help to understand religious traditions. These approaches take into account contemporary developments in scientific theories of perception, neuro-aesthetics and cultural studies, highlighting the socio-cultural and political context informing how humans perceive themselves and the world around them. Developing since the 1990s, the aesthetic approach has responded to debates in the study of religion, in particular striving to overcome biased categories that confined religion either to texts and abstract beliefs, or to an indisputable sui generis mode of experience. This volume documents what has been achieved to date, its significance for the study of religion and for interdisciplinary scholarship.
- Published
- 2017
17. UFB grants $1.4 million to 150 student groups in 2014-2015 academic year
- Subjects
Company financing ,News, opinion and commentary ,Sports and fitness - Abstract
The Undergraduate Finance Board met 80 percent of student group requests for funding this semester, a slight decrease from the 82 percent during the 2013-2014 academic year. Student groups collectively [...]
- Published
- 2015
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