RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Dissociation of broadband high-frequency activity and neuronal firing in the neocortex JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 531368 DO 10.1101/531368 A1 Marcin Leszczynski A1 Annamaria Barczak A1 Yoshinao Kajikawa A1 Istvan Ulbert A1 Arnaud Falchier A1 Idan Tal A1 Saskia Haegens A1 Lucia Melloni A1 Robert Knight A1 Charles Schroeder YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/01/25/531368.abstract AB Broadband High-frequency Activity (BHA; 70-150 Hz), also known as "high gamma," a key analytic signal in human intracranial recordings is often assumed to reflect local neural firing (multiunit activity; MUA). Accordingly, BHA has been used to study neuronal population responses in auditory (1,2), visual (3,4), language (5), mnemonic processes (6-9) and cognitive control (10,11). BHA is arguably the electrophysiological measure best correlated with the Blood Oxygenation Level Dependent (BOLD) signal in fMRI (12-13). However, beyond the fact that BHA correlates with neuronal spiking (12, 14-16), the neuronal populations and physiological processes generating BHA are not precisely defined. Although critical for interpreting intracranial signals in human and non-human primates, the precise physiology of BHA remains unknown. Here, we show that BHA dissociates from MUA in primary visual and auditory cortex. Using laminar multielectrode data in monkeys, we found a bimodal distribution of stimulus-evoked BHA across depth of a cortical column: an early-deep, followed by a later-superficial layer response. Only, the early-deep layer BHA had a clear local MUA correlate, while the more prominent superficial layer BHA had a weak or undetectable MUA correlate. In many cases, particularly in V1 (70%), supragranular sites showed strong BHA in lieu of any detectable increase in MUA. Due to volume conduction, BHA from both the early-deep and the later-supragranular generators contribute to the field potential at the pial surface, though the contribution may be weighted towards the late-supragranular BHA. Our results demonstrate that the strongest generators of BHA are in the superficial cortical layers and show that the origins of BHA include a mixture of the neuronal action potential firing and dendritic processes separable from this firing. It is likely that the typically-recorded BHA signal emphasizes the latter processes to a greater extent than previously recognized.