4.5 Article

Auditory Beat Stimulation Modulates Memory-Related Single-Neuron Activity in the Human Medial Temporal Lobe

Journal

BRAIN SCIENCES
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/brainsci11030364

Keywords

long-term memory; microwire recordings; item recognition; source recognition; binaural beats; monaural beats

Categories

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [DFG SFB 1089, SPP 2205, MO 930/4-2]
  2. German Ministry of Research and Education [BMBF 031L01978]
  3. Volkswagen Foundation [86 507]

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The study found that binaural and monaural beat stimulation has different effects on neural activity and memory performance, with specific neurons showing negative correlations between firing rate differences induced by binaural versus monaural beats and memory-related differences. This suggests that beat stimulation may influence memory performance by altering baseline firing levels in neurons, in line with concepts of homeostatic plasticity.
Auditory beats are amplitude-modulated signals (monaural beats) or signals that subjectively cause the perception of an amplitude modulation (binaural beats). We investigated the effects of monaural and binaural 5 Hz beat stimulation on neural activity and memory performance in neurosurgical patients performing an associative recognition task. Previously, we had reported that these beat stimulation conditions modulated memory performance in opposite directions. Here, we analyzed data from a patient subgroup, in which microwires were implanted in the amygdala, hippocampus, entorhinal cortex and parahippocampal cortex. We identified neurons responding with firing rate changes to binaural versus monaural 5 Hz beat stimulation. In these neurons, we correlated the differences in firing rates for binaural versus monaural beats to the memory-related differences for remembered versus forgotten items and associations. In the left hemisphere, we detected statistically significant negative correlations between firing rate differences for binaural versus monaural beats and remembered versus forgotten items/associations. Importantly, such negative correlations were also observed between beat stimulation-related firing rate differences in the pre-stimulus window and memory-related firing rate differences in the post-stimulus windows. In line with concepts of homeostatic plasticity, our findings suggest that beat stimulation is linked to memory performance via shifting baseline firing levels.

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