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Título
Intrinsic neural timescales: temporal integration and segregation
Autor
Año del Documento
2022
Editorial
Elsevier (Cell Press)
Documento Fuente
A. Wolff, N. Berberian, M. Golesorkhi, J. Gomez-Pilar, F. Zilio, y G. Northoff, Intrinsic neural timescales: temporal integration and segregation, Trends in Cognitive Sciences, vol. 26, n.º 2. Elsevier Ltd, pp. 159-173, 2022. doi: 10.1016/J.TICS.2021.11.007
Abstract
We are continuously bombarded by external inputs of various timescales from the environment. How does the brain process this multitude of timescales? Recent resting state studies show a hierarchy of intrinsic neural timescales (INT) with a shorter duration in unimodal regions (e.g., visual cortex and auditory cortex) and a longer duration in transmodal regions (e.g., default mode network). This unimodal-transmodal hierarchy is present across acquisition modalities [electroencephalogram (EEG)/magnetoencephalogram (MEG) and fMRI] and can be found in different species and during a variety of different task states. Together, this suggests that the hierarchy of INT is central to the temporal integration (combining successive stimuli) and segregation (separating successive stimuli) of external inputs from the environment, leading to temporal segmentation and prediction in perception and cognition.
ISSN
1364-6613
Revisión por pares
SI
Idioma
spa
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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