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Commentary| Volume 76, ISSUE 6, P434-435, September 15, 2014

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Time to Be Spontaneous: A Renaissance of Intrinsic Brain Activity in Psychosis Research?

  • Kevin M. Spencer
    Correspondence
    Address correspondence to Kevin M. Spencer, Ph.D., VA Boston Healthcare System, 151C, 150 S. Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02130
    Affiliations
    Research Service, VA Boston Healthcare System, and Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
    Search for articles by this author
      In the past several years, there has been a great deal of interest in using oscillations of the electroencephalogram (EEG) to understand the neural substrates of neuropsychiatric disorders. These EEG oscillations represent the coordinated activity of large populations of neurons, and oscillations in different frequency bands of the EEG are generated by distinct neural circuitries. For example, oscillations in the gamma band of the EEG (30–100 Hz) can be produced by reciprocal interactions between pyramidal cells and fast-spiking inhibitory interneurons, whereas beta (13–30 Hz) oscillations can be produced by interactions between gap junction–connected bursting pyramidal cells (
      • Kopell N.
      • Kramer M.A.
      • Malerba P.
      • Whittington M.A.
      Are different rhythms good for different functions?.
      ). The identification of some of the generating circuits of particular oscillations has indicated that EEG oscillations may become a promising central tool in translational neuroscience for two reasons. First, the generating circuits of at least some oscillations appear to be conserved across species (
      • Buzsáki G.
      • Logothetis N.
      • Singer W.
      Scaling brain size, keeping timing: Evolutionary preservation of brain rhythms.
      ). It may be possible to draw inferences about the effects of a treatment on an oscillation in a human patient based on the effects of that treatment in an animal model. Second, progress in neuropathology research has led to the identification of abnormal elements of neural circuits in neuropsychiatric disorders. The best examples are in schizophrenia (SZ), in which abnormalities of inhibitory interneurons have been characterized, especially in the parvalbumin-expressing, fast-spiking interneurons that are required for gamma generation (
      • Lewis D.A.
      • Curley A.A.
      • Glausier J.R.
      • Volk D.W.
      Cortical parvalbumin interneurons and cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia.
      ). Knowing how particular cells are disturbed in a disorder could lead to precise models of these disturbances in animal models using genetic approaches. These two avenues of progress could be united with measures of EEG oscillations in humans, which provide noninvasive measures of the activity of distinct neural circuits. Using animal and computational models of neural circuit abnormalities derived from neuropathologic studies, it may be possible to determine the source of oscillation abnormalities in patients with neuropsychiatric disorders.
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