Since neural synchronization has been linked to many cognitive functions, a theory of how it contributes to cognition is fundamental for explaining the neurophysiological basis of brain activity. According to Latvian professor Igor Val Danilov, the evolutionary basis of brainwave entrainment to external oscillations is one plausible solution to how the brain develops awareness and cognition. A
mother-fetus neurocognitive model provides neurophysiological insights into how cognition begins through fetal neural entrainment to the natural oscillations (coined Natural Neurostimulation) produced by the mother's body. This position argues that neural synchronization of fetal neural networks to the rhythm of the mother's heart is an evolutionary mechanism. This inherited process for the mother-fetus nervous system synchronization during gestation ensures fetal neural growth and the onset of cognitive functions. the theory of Natural Neurostimulation explains why high-frequency oscillations from anatomically non-connected nervous system zones become synchronized. • (1) Oscillatory synchronization (communication-through-coherence); • (2) Communication-through-resonance; • (3) Nonlinear integration; and • (4) Linear signal transmission (coherence-through-communication). Among them, the idea of brainwave interactions for network oscillatory synchronization is the most influential. Then, the theory of Natural Neurostimulation extended these insights. Prof. Igor Val Danilov argues that, in temporal coordination, low-frequency heart oscillations harmonize high-frequency brain oscillations across the nervous system due to the law of interference. Indeed, the essential principle of neural oscillations is that neurons are both generators and recipients of electromagnetic fields. According to physical laws, neural oscillations exhibit dual behavior in brain networks: they are influenced by spiking inputs and, in turn, affect the timing of spike outputs. Neural synchronization can be modulated by task constraints, such as
attention, and is thought to play a role in
feature binding,
neuronal communication, According to this idea, synchronous oscillations in neuronal ensembles bind neurons representing different features of an object. For example, when a person looks at a tree, visual cortex neurons representing the tree trunk and those representing the branches of the same tree would oscillate in synchrony to form a single representation of the tree. This phenomenon is best seen in
local field potentials which reflect the synchronous activity of local groups of neurons, but has also been shown in
EEG and
MEG recordings providing increasing evidence for a close relation between synchronous oscillatory activity and a variety of cognitive functions such as perceptual grouping Most evidence for central pattern generators comes from lower animals, such as the
lamprey, but there is also evidence for spinal central pattern generators in humans.
Information processing Neuronal spiking is generally considered the basis for information transfer in the brain. For such a transfer, information needs to be coded in a spiking pattern. Different types of coding schemes have been proposed, such as
rate coding and
temporal coding. Neural oscillations could create periodic time windows in which input spikes have larger effect on neurons, thereby providing a mechanism for decoding temporal codes.
Temporal decoding Single-cell intrinsic oscillators serve as valuable tools for decoding temporally-encoded sensory information. This information is encoded through inter-spike intervals, and intrinsic oscillators can act as 'temporal rulers' for precisely measuring these intervals. One notable mechanism for achieving this is the neuronal
phase-locked loop (NPLL). In this mechanism, cortical oscillators undergo modulation influenced by the firing rates of thalamocortical 'phase detectors,' which, in turn, gauge the disparity between the cortical and sensory periodicity.
Perception Synchronization of neuronal firing may serve as a means to group spatially segregated neurons that respond to the same stimulus in order to bind these responses for further joint processing, i.e. to exploit temporal synchrony to encode relations. Purely theoretical formulations of the binding-by-synchrony hypothesis were proposed first, but subsequently extensive experimental evidence has been reported supporting the potential role of synchrony as a relational code. The functional role of synchronized oscillatory activity in the brain was mainly established in experiments performed on awake kittens with multiple electrodes implanted in the visual cortex. These experiments showed that groups of spatially segregated neurons engage in synchronous oscillatory activity when activated by visual stimuli. The frequency of these oscillations was in the range of 40 Hz and differed from the periodic activation induced by the grating, suggesting that the oscillations and their synchronization were due to internal neuronal interactions. Since then, numerous studies have replicated these findings and extended them to different modalities such as EEG, providing extensive evidence of the functional role of
gamma oscillations in visual perception. Gilles Laurent and colleagues showed that oscillatory synchronization has an important functional role in odor perception. Perceiving different odors leads to different subsets of neurons firing on different sets of oscillatory cycles. These oscillations can be disrupted by
GABA blocker
picrotoxin, and the disruption of the oscillatory synchronization leads to impairment of behavioral discrimination of chemically similar odorants in bees, and to more similar responses across odors in downstream β-lobe neurons. Recent follow-up of this work has shown that oscillations create periodic integration windows for
Kenyon cells in the insect
mushroom body, such that incoming spikes from the
antennal lobe are more effective in activating Kenyon cells only at specific phases of the oscillatory cycle. and in somatosensory perception. However, recent findings argue against a clock-like function of cortical gamma oscillations.
Motor coordination Oscillations have been commonly reported in the motor system. Pfurtscheller and colleagues found a reduction in
alpha (8–12 Hz) and
beta (13–30 Hz) oscillations in
EEG activity when subjects made a movement. Using intra-cortical recordings, similar changes in oscillatory activity were found in the motor cortex when the monkeys performed motor acts that required significant attention. In addition, oscillations at spinal level become synchronised to beta oscillations in the motor cortex during constant muscle activation, as determined by
cortico-muscular coherence. Likewise, muscle activity of different muscles reveals
inter-muscular coherence at multiple distinct frequencies reflecting the underlying
neural circuitry involved in
motor coordination. Recently it was found that cortical oscillations propagate as
travelling waves across the surface of the motor cortex along dominant spatial axes characteristic of the local circuitry of the motor cortex. It has been proposed that motor commands in the form of travelling waves can be spatially filtered by the descending fibres to selectively control muscle force. Simulations have shown that ongoing wave activity in cortex can elicit steady muscle force with physiological levels of EEG-EMG coherence. Oscillatory rhythms at 10 Hz have been recorded in a brain area called the
inferior olive, which is associated with the cerebellum. and when performing slow finger movements. These findings may indicate that the human brain controls continuous movements intermittently. In support, it was shown that these movement discontinuities are directly correlated to oscillatory activity in a cerebello-thalamo-cortical loop, which may represent a neural mechanism for the intermittent motor control.
Memory Neural oscillations, in particular
theta activity, are extensively linked to memory function. Theta rhythms are very strong in rodent hippocampi and entorhinal cortex during learning and memory retrieval, and they are believed to be vital to the induction of
long-term potentiation, a potential cellular mechanism for learning and memory.
Coupling between theta and
gamma activity is thought to be vital for memory functions, including
episodic memory. Tight coordination of single-neuron spikes with local theta oscillations is linked to successful memory formation in humans, as more stereotyped spiking predicts better memory.
Sleep and consciousness Sleep is a naturally recurring state characterized by reduced or absent
consciousness and proceeds in cycles of
rapid eye movement (REM) and
non-rapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. Sleep stages are characterized by spectral content of
EEG: for instance, stage N1 refers to the transition of the brain from alpha waves (common in the awake state) to theta waves, whereas stage N3 (deep or slow-wave sleep) is characterized by the presence of delta waves. The normal order of sleep stages is N1 → N2 → N3, consistently found in the first half of the night. == Pathology ==