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Dive into the research topics where Andrew A. Fingelkurts is active.

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Featured researches published by Andrew A. Fingelkurts.


Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2005

Functional connectivity in the brain--is it an elusive concept?

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Seppo Kähkönen

Even though functional brain connectivity is an influential concept in modern cognitive neuroscience, it is a very controversial notion. This is why further theoretical and methodological clarification are needed to help define precisely what is meant by functional connectivity and to help frame-associated issues. In this review we present the neurophysiological concept of functional connectivity, which utilizes in a plausible manner the notion of neural assemblies, as well as local and large-scale levels of description. Here functional connectivity is the mechanism for the coordination of activity between different neural assemblies in order to achieve a complex cognitive task or perceptual process. Our theoretical and empirical findings offer new insights into possible implications of the concept of functional connectivity for cognitive neuroscience.


International Journal of Neuroscience | 2004

MAKING COMPLEXITY SIMPLER: MULTIVARIABILITY AND METASTABILITY IN THE BRAIN

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts

This article provides a retrospective, current, and prospective overview on developments in brain research and neuroscience. Both theoretical and empirical studies are considered, with emphasis in the concept of multivariability and metastability in the brain. In this new view on the human brain, the potential multivariability of the neuronal networks appears to be far from continuous in time, but confined by the dynamics of short-term local and global metastable brain states. The article closes by suggesting some of the implications of this view in future multidisciplinary brain research.


Human Brain Mapping | 2007

Impaired Functional Connectivity at EEG Alpha and Theta Frequency Bands in Major Depression

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Heikki Rytsälä; Kirsi Suominen; E. Isometsä; Seppo Kähkönen

Recent reports on functional brain imaging in major depression have lead to an assumption that observed psychopathology might be related to an altered brain functional connectivity. Our hypothesis was that an increase in brain functional connectivity occurs in major depression. As a measure of functional connectivity, the electroencephalogram (EEG) structural synchrony approach was used in 12 medication‐free depressive outpatients and 10 control subjects. Differences in the number and strength of structurally synchronized EEG patterns were compared between groups. In depressive patients the number and strength of short cortex functional connections were significantly larger for the left than for the right hemisphere, while the number and strength of long functional connections were significantly larger for the right than for the left hemisphere. Some of the functional connections were positively correlated with the severity of depression, thus being predictive. These were short‐range anterior, posterior, and left hemisphere functional connections for the alpha frequency band and short‐range anterior functional connections for the theta frequency band. The topology of the most representative functional connections among all patients with major depression indicated that the right anterior and left posterior brain parts may discriminate depressive patients from healthy controls. The obtained data support our hypothesis that there is an increase in brain functional connectivity in major depression. This finding was interpreted within the semantic framework, where different specialization of left (monosemantic context) and right (polysemantic context) hemispheres is functionally insufficient in patients with depression. Hum Brain Mapp, 2007.


Cognitive Processing | 2006

Timing in cognition and EEG brain dynamics: discreteness versus continuity.

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts

This article provides an overview of recent developments in solving the timing problem (discreteness vs. continuity) in cognitive neuroscience. Both theoretical and empirical studies have been considered, with an emphasis on the framework of operational architectonics (OA) of brain functioning (Fingelkurts and Fingelkurts in Brain Mind 2:291–29, 2001; Neurosci Biobehav Rev 28:827–836, 2005). This framework explores the temporal structure of information flow and interarea interactions within the network of functional neuronal populations by examining topographic sharp transition processes in the scalp EEG, on the millisecond scale. We conclude, based on the OA framework, that brain functioning is best conceptualized in terms of continuity–discreteness unity which is also the characteristic property of cognition. At the end we emphasize where one might productively proceed for the future research.


Physics of Life Reviews | 2010

Natural world physical, brain operational, and mind phenomenal space-time

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Carlos F.H. Neves

Concepts of space and time are widely developed in physics. However, there is a considerable lack of biologically plausible theoretical frameworks that can demonstrate how space and time dimensions are implemented in the activity of the most complex life-system - the brain with a mind. Brain activity is organized both temporally and spatially, thus representing space-time in the brain. Critical analysis of recent research on the space-time organization of the brains activity pointed to the existence of so-called operational space-time in the brain. This space-time is limited to the execution of brain operations of differing complexity. During each such brain operation a particular short-term spatio-temporal pattern of integrated activity of different brain areas emerges within related operational space-time. At the same time, to have a fully functional human brain one needs to have a subjective mental experience. Current research on the subjective mental experience offers detailed analysis of space-time organization of the mind. According to this research, subjective mental experience (subjective virtual world) has definitive spatial and temporal properties similar to many physical phenomena. Based on systematic review of the propositions and tenets of brain and mind space-time descriptions, our aim in this review essay is to explore the relations between the two. To be precise, we would like to discuss the hypothesis that via the brain operational space-time the mind subjective space-time is connected to otherwise distant physical space-time reality.


Brain and Language | 2003

Cortical operational synchrony during audio-visual speech integration.

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Christina M. Krause; Riikka Möttönen; Mikko Sams

Information from different sensory modalities is processed in different cortical regions. However, our daily perception is based on the overall impression resulting from the integration of information from multiple sensory modalities. At present it is not known how the human brain integrates information from different modalities into a unified percept. Using a robust phenomenon known as the McGurk effect it was shown in the present study that audio-visual synthesis takes place within a distributed and dynamic cortical networks with emergent properties. Various cortical sites within these networks interact with each other by means of so-called operational synchrony (Kaplan, Fingelkurts, Fingelkurts, & Darkhovsky, 1997). The temporal synchronization of cortical operations processing unimodal stimuli at different cortical sites reveals the importance of the temporal features of auditory and visual stimuli for audio-visual speech integration.


Neuroscience Research | 2006

Composition of brain oscillations in ongoing EEG during major depression disorder.

Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Heikki Rytsälä; Kirsi Suominen; Erkki Isometsä; Seppo Kähkönen

In the present study, we examined the composition of electroencephalographic (EEG) brain oscillations in 12 unmedicated major depressive outpatients and 10 healthy subjects during resting conditions (closed eyes). The exact composition of brain oscillations was assessed by the probability-classification analysis of short-term EEG spectral patterns. In contrast to previous studies of depression, the current study found that major depression affects brain activity in nearly the whole cortex and manifests itself in considerable reorganization of the composition of brain oscillations in a broad frequency range: 0.5-30 Hz. At the same time, the magnitude of the effect of depression was maximal in the posterior cortex of the brain. Interhemisphere asymmetry during major depression was also observed in the whole cortex with right hyperactivity in frontal, parietal and occipital brain areas. It is suggested that depressive brain is manifested in the superposition of distributed multiple oscillations. Our findings provide new insight on the relationship between major depressive disorder and cortical oscillatory activity.


Neuropsychologia | 2007

Cortex functional connectivity as a neurophysiological correlate of hypnosis: An EEG case study

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Sakari Kallio; Antti Revonsuo

Cortex functional connectivity associated with hypnosis was investigated in a single highly hypnotizable subject in a normal baseline condition and under neutral hypnosis during two sessions separated by a year. After the hypnotic induction, but without further suggestions as compared to the baseline condition, all studied parameters of local and remote functional connectivity were significantly changed. The significant differences between hypnosis and the baseline condition were observable (to different extent) in five studied independent frequency bands (delta, theta, alpha, beta, and gamma). The results were consistent and stable after 1 year. Based on these findings we conclude that alteration in functional connectivity of the brain may be regarded as a neuronal correlate of hypnosis (at least in very highly hypnotizable subjects) in which separate cognitive modules and subsystems may be temporarily incapable of communicating with each other normally.


The Open Neuroimaging Journal | 2008

Brain-Mind Operational Architectonics Imaging: Technical and Methodological Aspects

Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Alexander A. Fingelkurts

This review paper deals with methodological and technical foundations of the Operational Architectonics framework of brain and mind functioning. This theory provides a framework for mapping and understanding important aspects of the brain mechanisms that constitute perception, cognition, and eventually consciousness. The methods utilized within Operational Architectonics framework allow analyzing with an incredible detail the operational behavior of local neuronal assemblies and their joint activity in the form of unified and metastable operational modules, which constitute the whole hierarchy of brain operations, operations of cognition and phenomenal consciousness.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2002

Probability interrelations between pre-/post-stimulus intervals and ERD/ERS during a memory task.

Alexander A. Fingelkurts; Andrew A. Fingelkurts; Christina M. Krause; Mikko Sams

OBJECTIVES To investigate the functional relationship between oscillatory electroencephalographic (EEG) components (pre-/post-stimulus intervals) with audio-event-related desynchronization/synchronization (ERD/ERS). METHODS In an experimental study (9 subjects), the probability-classification analysis of single-trial spectral EEG changes was utilized. Results were compared with auditory ERD/ERS. RESULTS It was shown that (1) variability of EEG spectral patterns was considerable, (2) EEG activity was different at various task stages, (3) probability measures were different from the results of conventional frequency analysis, (4) probability of trials with alpha- and theta-patterns was characteristically different in various task stages, (5) the occurrence of alpha- and theta-trials were most probable, but not frequent enough to characterize all the trials. The results suggest that the ERD/ERS responses are influenced by EEG characteristics in the pre-stimulus interval, which also have a strong influence on the EEG in the post-stimulus interval. CONCLUSIONS Alpha- and theta-ERD/ERS responses during memory task performance are not typical for all trials. They reflect EEG changes only in approximately 39% for alpha-activity and approximately 43% for theta-oscillations of all trials, what reflects piecewise stationary EEG structure.

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Cristina Boccagni

Sant'Anna School of Advanced Studies

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Seppo Kähkönen

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Reetta Kivisaari

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Olga Jokela

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Taina Autti

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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