TY - JOUR T1 - Modulation of visual gamma oscillation by excitatory drive and the excitation/inhibition balance in the visual cortex JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/188326 SP - 188326 AU - EV Orekhova AU - OV Sysoeva AU - JF Schneiderman AU - S Lundström AU - IA Galuta AU - DE Goiaeva AU - AO Prokofyev AU - B Riaz AU - C Keeler AU - N Hadjikhani AU - C Gillberg AU - TA Stroganova Y1 - 2017/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/09/13/188326.abstract N2 - Cortical gamma oscillations are generated in circuits that include excitatory (E) and inhibitory (I) neurons. Prominent MEG/EEG gamma oscillations in visual cortex can be induced by static or moving high-contrast edges stimuli. In a previous study in children, we observed that increasing velocity of visual motion substantially accelerated gamma oscillations, and led to the suppression of gamma response magnitude. These velocity-related modulations might reflect the balance between neural excitation induced by increasing excitatory drive, and efficacy of inhibition.Here, we searched for functional correlates of visual gamma modulations and assessed their development in 75 typically developing individuals aged 7-40 years. Gamma oscillations were measured with MEG in response to high-contrast annular gratings drifting at 1.2, 3.6, or 6.0°/s. In adults, we also recorded pupillary constriction as an indirect measure of excitatory drive.Pupil constriction increased with increasing velocity, thus suggesting increased excitatory drive to the cortex. Despite drastic developmental changes in gamma frequency and response strength, the magnitude of the velocity-related gamma modulations – a shift to higher frequency and amplitude suppression – remained remarkably stable. Based on the previous simulation studies, we hypothesized that gamma suppression might result from excessively strong excitatory drive caused by increasing motion velocity and reflects a tradeoff between overexcited excitatory and inhibitory circuitry. In children, the stronger gamma suppression correlated with higher IQ, suggesting importance of an optimal E/I balance for cognitive functioning.The velocity-related changes in gamma response may appear useful to assess E/I balance in the visual cortex.HighlightsSpeeding visual motion increases frequency and suppresses power of gamma.Gamma frequency decreases from 7 years on, faster in children than in adults.Magnitude of velocity-related modulation remains stable across 7-40 years.Gamma suppression correlates with gamma frequency and IQ in children.Gamma suppression may reflect efficiency of excitation/inhibition balance. ER -