Filter
-
(205)
-
(176)
-
(8)
-
(189)
-
(66)
-
(10)
-
(252)
-
(89)
-
(1)
-
(49)
-
(287)
-
(16)
-
(36)
-
(797)
-
(43)
-
(14)
-
(1210)
-
(399)
-
(463)
-
(437)
6371 - 6380
of 7028 results
-
In humans, impaired response inhibition is characteristic of a wide range of psychiatric diseases and of normal aging. It is hypothesized that the right inferior frontal cortex (rIFC) plays a key role by inhibiting the motor cortex via the basal ganglia. The electroencephalography (EEG)-derived β-rhythm (15–29 Hz) is thought to reflect communication within this network, with increased right frontal β-power often observed before successful response inhibition. Recent literature suggests that averaging spectral power obscures the transient, burst-like nature of β-activity. There is evidence that the rate of β-bursts following a Stop signal is higher when a motor response is successfully inhibited. However, other characteristics of β-burst events, and their topographical properties, have not yet been examined. Here, we used a large human (male and female) EEG Stop Signal task (SST) dataset ( n = 218) to examine averaged normalized β-power, β-burst rate, and β-burst “volume” (which we defined as burst duration...Jun 9, 2021