4.6 Article

Brain mapping of auditory hallucinations and illusions induced by direct intracortical electrical stimulation

Journal

BRAIN STIMULATION
Volume 15, Issue 5, Pages 1077-1087

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.brs.2022.08.002

Keywords

Auditory hallucination and illusion; Stereo-electroencephalography; Direct electrical stimulation; Gamma band activity; Probabilistic brain mapping

Funding

  1. European Union [785907, 945539]
  2. Grenoble-Alpes University Hospital [DRCI 1325]
  3. Agence Nationale pour la Recherche (International Collaborative Research Project ANR-DFG) [ANR-18-CE92-0053-01]

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Auditory symptoms induced by direct electrical stimulation provide insights into the brain networks involved in auditory hallucinations and illusions. Both illusions and hallucinations can be evoked at different levels of the sensory hierarchy, with illusions having a larger spatial range.
Background: The exact architecture of the human auditory cortex remains a subject of debate, with discrepancies between functional and microstructural studies. In a hierarchical framework for sensory perception, simple sound perception is expected to take place in the primary auditory cortex, while the processing of complex, or more integrated perceptions is proposed to rely on associative and higher -order cortices.Objectives: We hypothesize that auditory symptoms induced by direct electrical stimulation (DES) offer a window into the architecture of the brain networks involved in auditory hallucinations and illusions. The intracranial recordings of these evoked perceptions of varying levels of integration provide the evidence to discuss the theoretical model.Methods: We analyzed SEEG recordings from 50 epileptic patients presenting auditory symptoms induced by DES. First, using the Juelich cytoarchitectonic parcellation, we quantified which regions induced auditory symptoms when stimulated (ROI approach). Then, for each evoked auditory symptom type (illusion or hallucination), we mapped the cortical networks showing concurrent high-frequency activity modulation (HFA approach).Results: Although on average, illusions were found more laterally and hallucinations more poster-omedially in the temporal lobe, both perceptions were elicited in all levels of the sensory hierarchy, with mixed responses found in the overlap. The spatial range was larger for illusions, both in the ROI and HFA approaches. The limbic system was specific to the hallucinations network, and the inferior parietal lobule was specific to the illusions network.Discussion: Our results confirm a network-based organization underlying conscious sound perception, for both simple and complex components. While symptom localization is interesting from an epilepsy semiology perspective, the hallucination-specific modulation of the limbic system is particularly relevant to tinnitus and schizophrenia.(c) 2022 Published by Elsevier Inc. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).

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