4.3 Article

Breathing as a Fundamental Rhythm of Brain Function

期刊

FRONTIERS IN NEURAL CIRCUITS
卷 10, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fncir.2016.00115

关键词

mind-body; cortical oscillations; respiration; embodied cognition; phase transitions; phase amplitude coupling; proprioception; graph theory

资金

  1. UTHSC College of Medicine iRISE Pilot Program
  2. Department of Anatomy and Neurobiology, University Tennessee Health Science Center
  3. NSF CRCNS grant [NSF-DMS-13-11165]
  4. DARPA MTO Superior Artificial Intelligence initiative
  5. UTHSC Neuroscience Institute

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Ongoing fluctuations of neuronal activity have long been considered intrinsic noise that introduces unavoidable and unwanted variability into neuronal processing, which the brain eliminates by averaging across population activity (Georgopoulos et al., 1986; Lee et al_ 1988; Shadier) and Newsome, 1994; Maynard et al., 1999). It is now understood, that the seemingly random fluctuations of cortical activity form highly structured patterns, including oscillations at various frequencies, that modulate evoked neuronal responses (Arieli et al., 1996; Poulet and Petersen, 2008; He, 2013) and affect sensory perception (Linkenkaer-Hansen et al., 2004; Holy et al., 2007; Sadaghiani et al., 2009; Vinnik et al., 2012; Palva et al., 2013). Ongoing cortical activity is driven by proprioceptive and interoceptive inputs. In addition, it is partially intrinsically generated in which case it may be related to mental processes (Fox and Raichle, 2007; Deco et al., 2011). Here we argue that respiration, via multiple sensory pathways, contributes a rhythmic component to the ongoing cortical activity. We suggest that this rhythmic activity modulates the temporal organization of cortical neurodynamics, thereby linking higher cortical functions to the process of breathing.

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