Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3048207 Clinical Neurophysiology 2007 18 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveTheta and alpha range EEG oscillations are commonly induced in cognitive tasks, but their possible relationship to the BOLD signal of fMRI is not well understood, and individual variability is high. We explored individual differences in EEG reactivity to determine whether it is positively or negatively correlated with BOLD across subjects.MethodsA Sternberg working memory task with 2, 4, or 6 digits was administered to 18 subjects in separate fMRI and EEG sessions. Memory load-dependent theta and alpha reactivity was quantified and used as a regressor to reveal brain areas exhibiting EEG–fMRI correlation across subjects.ResultsTheta increases localized to medial prefrontal cortex, and correlated negatively with BOLD in that region and in other “default mode” areas. Alpha modulation localized to parietal–occipital midline cortex and also correlated negatively with BOLD.ConclusionsIndividual tendencies to exhibit memory load-dependent oscillations are associated with negative BOLD responses in certain brain regions.SignificancePositive BOLD responses and increased EEG oscillations do not necessarily arise in the same regions. Negative BOLD responses may also relate to cognitive activity, as traditionally indexed by increased EEG power in the theta band.

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