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Zusammenfassung:
Sharp-wave ripple complexes (SPW-Rs), transient episodes of neural activity combining a sharp wave of dendritic
depolarization and a high-frequency oscillation, are a major feature of the cortico-hippocampal communication
during immobility, consummatory behaviors and sleep. Experimental evidence relates these episodes to offline
consolidation of memory traces. In order to allow for the wide range of network reconfigurations required by this
process, different SPW-R events certainly reflect a large variety of selective interactions both within the hippocampus and with other brain regions. A better understanding of the underlying mechanisms of these interactions thus requires a finer characterization of the SPW-R events and their associated signatures over the entire brain. Using unsupervised-learning artificial neural networks and clustering techniques, we analyzed peri-event multi-channel local field potential (LFP) recordings of the hippocampus of anesthetized macaques, and extracted the electrophysiological characteristics of SPW-R events dynamics. We combined this analysis with neural event-triggered functional magnetic resonance imaging analysis in order to map the activity of the whole brain during SPW-R
events. Our primary findings hint upon differentiated SPW-R complexes, whose signatures come in four classes: high frequency oscillations preceding, following or located in the peak of sharp wave dendritic depolarization, as well as high frequency oscillations without noticeable sharp-wave signature. These differentiated SPW-R LFP signatures were highly reproducible both across different animals and experimental sessions. At a larger scale, ripple-triggered fMRI activation map for most of the cerebral cortex and sub-cortical regions during ripples has been described by Logothetis et al., 2012. On top of this, our preliminary results suggest that the classes of SPWR field potential signatures reflect differentiated cortical activation and sub-cortical deactivation maps. In light of these findings, we hypothesize that these distinct patterns of SPW-R in hippocampal LFP mark differentiated brain-wide dynamical events, possibly reflecting several underlying mechanisms of memory function.