The human brain exhibits a modular and hierarchical structure, spanning low-order sensorimotor to high-order cognitive/affective systems. What is the mechanistic significance of this organization for brain dynamics and information processing properties? We investigated this question using rare simultaneous multimodal electrophysiology (stereotactic and scalp electroencephalography - EEG) recordings in 36 patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy during presurgical intracerebral electrical stimulation (iES) (323 stimulation sessions). Our analyses revealed an anatomical gradient of excitability across the cortex, with stronger iES-evoked EEG responses in high-order compared to low-order regions. Mathematical modeling further showed that this variation in excitability levels results from a differential dependence on recurrent feedback from non-stimulated regions across the anatomical hierarchy, and could be extinguished by suppressing those connections in-silico. High-order brain regions/networks thus show an activity pattern characterized by more inter-network functional integration than low-order ones, which manifests as a spatial gradient of excitability that is emergent from, and causally dependent on, the underlying hierarchical network structure. These findings offer new insights into how hierarchical brain organization influences cognitive functions and could inform strategies for targeted neuromodulation therapies.
Stimulation mapping and whole-brain modeling reveal gradients of excitability and recurrence in cortical networks / D. Momi, Z. Wang, S. Parmigiani, E. Mikulan, S.P. Bastiaens, M.P. Oveisi, K. Kadak, G. Gaglioti, A.C. Waters, S. Hill, A. Pigorini, C.J. Keller, J.D. Griffiths. - In: NATURE COMMUNICATIONS. - ISSN 2041-1723. - 16:1(2025 Apr 04), pp. 3222.1-3222.12. [10.1038/s41467-025-58187-6]
Stimulation mapping and whole-brain modeling reveal gradients of excitability and recurrence in cortical networks
S. Parmigiani;E. Mikulan;G. Gaglioti;A. Pigorini;
2025
Abstract
The human brain exhibits a modular and hierarchical structure, spanning low-order sensorimotor to high-order cognitive/affective systems. What is the mechanistic significance of this organization for brain dynamics and information processing properties? We investigated this question using rare simultaneous multimodal electrophysiology (stereotactic and scalp electroencephalography - EEG) recordings in 36 patients with drug-resistant focal epilepsy during presurgical intracerebral electrical stimulation (iES) (323 stimulation sessions). Our analyses revealed an anatomical gradient of excitability across the cortex, with stronger iES-evoked EEG responses in high-order compared to low-order regions. Mathematical modeling further showed that this variation in excitability levels results from a differential dependence on recurrent feedback from non-stimulated regions across the anatomical hierarchy, and could be extinguished by suppressing those connections in-silico. High-order brain regions/networks thus show an activity pattern characterized by more inter-network functional integration than low-order ones, which manifests as a spatial gradient of excitability that is emergent from, and causally dependent on, the underlying hierarchical network structure. These findings offer new insights into how hierarchical brain organization influences cognitive functions and could inform strategies for targeted neuromodulation therapies.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
unpaywall-bitstream-81503825.pdf
accesso aperto
Tipologia:
Publisher's version/PDF
Licenza:
Creative commons
Dimensione
5.14 MB
Formato
Adobe PDF
|
5.14 MB | Adobe PDF | Visualizza/Apri |
Pubblicazioni consigliate
I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.




