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Dive into the research topics where Igor O. Volkov is active.

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Featured researches published by Igor O. Volkov.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2000

Auditory cortex on the human posterior superior temporal gyrus

Matthew A. Howard; Igor O. Volkov; R. Mirsky; P. C. Garell; M. D. Noh; Mark A. Granner; Hanna Damasio; Mitchell Steinschneider; Richard A. Reale; J. E. Hind; John F. Brugge

The human superior temporal cortex plays a critical role in hearing, speech, and language, yet its functional organization is poorly understood. Evoked potentials (EPs) to auditory click‐train stimulation presented binaurally were recorded chronically from penetrating electrodes implanted in Heschls gyrus (HG), from pial‐surface electrodes placed on the lateral superior temporal gyrus (STG), or from both simultaneously, in awake humans undergoing surgery for medically intractable epilepsy. The distribution of averaged EPs was restricted to a relatively small area on the lateral surface of the posterior STG. In several cases, there were multiple foci of high amplitude EPs lying along this acoustically active portion of STG. EPs recorded simultaneously from HG and STG differed in their sensitivities to general anesthesia and to changes in rate of stimulus presentation. Results indicate that the acoustically active region on the STG is a separate auditory area, functionally distinct from the HG auditory field(s). We refer to this acoustically sensitive area of the STG as the posterior lateral superior temporal area (PLST). Electrical stimulation of HG resulted in short‐latency EPs in an area that overlaps PLST, indicating that PLST receives a corticocortical input, either directly or indirectly, from HG. These physiological findings are in accord with anatomic evidence in humans and in nonhuman primates that the superior temporal cortex contains multiple interconnected auditory areas. J. Comp. Neurol. 416:79–92, 2000.


Brain Research | 1996

A chronic microelectrode investigation of the tonotopic organization of human auditory cortex

Matthew A. Howard; Igor O. Volkov; Paul J. Abbas; Hanna Damasio; Michael C. Ollendieck; Mark A. Granner

We investigated the functional organization of human auditory cortex using a new chronic microelectrode technique. Tonotopic mapping data was obtained at the single unit level for the first time in humans. All sound-driven units were noted to have frequency-dependent response patterns. The majority of units (73%) demonstrated sharply tuned excitatory best-frequency responses. Twenty seven percent of units showed wide receptive fields, representing excitatory responses to almost the entire range of frequencies presented. A tonotopic pattern was observed with best frequencies systematically increasing as more medial-caudal recording sites were sampled.


Hearing Research | 2008

Functional localization of auditory cortical fields of human: Click-train stimulation

John F. Brugge; Igor O. Volkov; Hiroyuki Oya; Hiroto Kawasaki; Richard A. Reale; Albert J. Fenoy; Mitchell Steinschneider; Matthew A. Howard

Averaged auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) to bilaterally presented 100 Hz click trains were recorded from multiple sites simultaneously within Heschls gyrus (HG) and on the posterolateral surface of the superior temporal gyrus (STG) in epilepsy-surgery patients. Three auditory fields were identified based on AEP waveforms and their distribution. Primary (core) auditory cortex was localized to posteromedial HG. Here the AEP was characterized by a robust polyphasic low-frequency field potential having a short onset latency and on which was superimposed a smaller frequency-following response to the click train. Core AEPs exhibited the lowest response threshold and highest response amplitude at one HG site with threshold rising and amplitude declining systematically on either side of it. The AEPs recorded anterolateral to the core, if present, were typically of low amplitude, with little or no evidence of short-latency waves or the frequency-following response that characterized core AEPs. We suggest that this area is part of a lateral auditory belt system. Robust AEPs, with waveforms demonstrably different from those of the core or lateral belt, were localized to the posterolateral surface of the STG and conform to previously described field PLST.


BioSystems | 2007

Functional connections between auditory cortical fields in humans revealed by Granger causality analysis of intra-cranial evoked potentials to sounds: Comparison of two methods

Hiroyuki Oya; Paul Wai-Fung Poon; John F. Brugge; Richard A. Reale; Hiroto Kawasaki; Igor O. Volkov; Matthew A. Howard

Knowledge of neural interactions amongst cortical sites is important for understanding higher brain function. We studied such interactions using Granger causality (GC) to analyze auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) recorded directly and simultaneously from two physiologically identified and functionally interconnected auditory areas of cerebral cortex in human neurosurgical patients. Two methods of GC analysis were used and the results compared. Both approaches involved adaptive autoregressive modeling but differed from each other in other ways. Results obtained by using the two methods also differed. Fewer false-positive results were obtained using the method that suppressed the ERP non-stationarity and that expressed the GC as the sum of model coefficients, which suggests that this is the more appropriate approach for analyzing ERPs recorded directly from the human cortex.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2007

Functional connections within the human inferior frontal gyrus.

Jeremy D. W. Greenlee; Hiroyuki Oya; Hiroto Kawasaki; Igor O. Volkov; Meryl Severson; Matthew A. Howard; John F. Brugge

The highly convoluted and cytoarchitectonically diverse inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) of humans is known to be critically involved in a wide range of complex operations including speech and language processing. The neural circuitry that underlies these operations is not fully understood. We hypothesized that this neural circuitry includes functional connections within and between the three major IFG subgyri: the pars orbitalis, pars triangularis, and pars opercularis. To test this hypothesis we employed electrical stimulation tract‐tracing techniques in 10 human patients undergoing surgical treatment for intractable epilepsy. The approach involved delivering repeated bipolar electrical stimuli to one site on the IFG while recording the electrical response evoked by that stimulus from a 64‐contact grid overlying more distant IFG sites. In all subjects, stimulation of a site on one subgyrus evoked polyphasic potentials at distant sites, either on the same subgyrus or on an adjacent subgyrus. This provided prima facie evidence for a functional connection between the site of stimulation and the sites of the evoked response. The averaged evoked potentials tended to aggregate as response fields. The spatial spread of a response field indicated a divergent projection from the site of stimulation. When two or more sites were stimulated, the resulting evoked potentials exhibited different waveforms while the respective response fields could overlap substantially, suggesting that input from multiple sites converged but by engaging different neural circuits. The earliest deflection in the evoked potential ranged from 2 to 10 msec. No differences were noted between language‐dominant and language‐nondominant hemispheres. J. Comp. Neurol. 503:550–559, 2007.


Brain Research | 2006

Hearing suppression induced by electrical stimulation of human auditory cortex

Albert J. Fenoy; Meryl Severson; Igor O. Volkov; John F. Brugge; Matthew A. Howard

In the course of performing electrical stimulation functional mapping (ESFM) in neurosurgery patients, we identified three subjects who experienced hearing suppression during stimulation of sites within the superior temporal gyrus (STG). One of these patients had long standing tinnitus that affected both ears. In all subjects, auditory event related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from chronically implanted intracranial electrodes and the results were used to localize auditory cortical fields within the STG. Hearing suppression sites were identified within anterior lateral Heschls gyrus (HG) and posterior lateral STG, in what may be auditory belt and parabelt fields. Cortical stimulation suppressed hearing in both ears, which persisted beyond the period of electrical stimulation. Subjects experienced other stimulation-evoked perceptions at some of these same sites, including symptoms of vestibular activation and alteration of audio-visual speech processing. In contrast, stimulation of presumed core auditory cortex within posterior medial HG evoked sound perceptions, or in one case an increase in tinnitus intensity, that affected the contralateral ear and did not persist beyond the period of stimulation. The current results confirm a rarely reported experimental observation, and correlate the cortical sites associated with hearing suppression with physiologically identified auditory cortical fields.


Stereotactic and Functional Neurosurgery | 1997

Chronic Microelectrode Investigations of Normal Human Brain Physiology Using a Hybrid Depth Electrode

Matthew A. Howard; Igor O. Volkov; M. Daniel Noh; Mark A. Granner; Roman Mirsky; P. Charles Garell

Neurosurgeons have unique access to in vivo human brain tissue, and in the course of clinical treatment important scientific advances have been made that further our understanding of normal brain physiology. In the modern era, microelectrode recordings have been used to systematically investigate the cellular properties of lateral temporal cerebral cortex. The current report describes a hybrid depth electrode (HDE) recording technique that was developed to enable neurosurgeons to simultaneously investigate normal cellular physiology during chronic intracranial EEG recordings. The HDE combines microelectrode and EEG recordings sites on a single shaft. Multiple microelectrode recordings are obtained from MRI defined brain sites and single-unit activity is discriminated from these data. To date, over 60 HDEs have been placed in 20 epilepsy surgery patients. Unique physiologic data have been gathered from neurons in numerous brain regions, including amygdala, hippocampus, frontal lobe, insula and Heschls gyrus. Functional activation studies were carried out without risking patient safety or comfort.


Cerebral Cortex | 2013

Functional Connection Between Posterior Superior Temporal Gyrus and Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex in Human

P.C. Garell; H. Bakken; Jeremy D. W. Greenlee; Igor O. Volkov; Richard A. Reale; Hiroyuki Oya; Hiroto Kawasaki; Matthew A. Howard; John F. Brugge

The connection between auditory fields of the temporal lobe and prefrontal cortex has been well characterized in nonhuman primates. Little is known of temporofrontal connectivity in humans, however, due largely to the fact that invasive experimental approaches used so successfully to trace anatomical pathways in laboratory animals cannot be used in humans. Instead, we used a functional tract-tracing method in 12 neurosurgical patients with multicontact electrode arrays chronically implanted over the left (n = 7) or right (n = 5) perisylvian temporal auditory cortex (area PLST) and the ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC) of the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) for diagnosis and treatment of medically intractable epilepsy. Area PLST was identified by the distribution of average auditory-evoked potentials obtained in response to simple and complex sounds. The same sounds evoked little if there is any activity in VLPFC. A single bipolar electrical pulse (0.2 ms, charge-balanced) applied between contacts within physiologically identified PLST resulted in polyphasic evoked potentials clustered in VLPFC, with greatest activation being in pars triangularis of the IFG. The average peak latency of the earliest negative deflection of the evoked potential on VLPFC was 13.48 ms (range: 9.0-18.5 ms), providing evidence for a rapidly conducting pathway between area PLST and VLPFC.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 1998

Introductory overview of research instruments for recording the electrical activity of neurons in the human brain

P. C. Garell; Mark A. Granner; M. D. Noh; Matthew A. Howard; Igor O. Volkov; George T. Gillies

Scientific advancement is often spurred by the development of new instruments for investigation. Over the last several decades, many new instruments have been produced to further our understanding of the physiology of the human brain. We present a partial overview of some of these instruments, paying particular attention to those which record the electrical activity of the human brain. We preface the review with a brief primer on neuroanatomy and physiology, followed by a discussion of the latest types of apparatus used to investigate various properties of the central nervous system. A special focus is on microelectrode investigations that employ both intracellular and extracellular methods of recording the electrical activity of single neurons; another is on the modern electroencephalographic, electrocorticographic, and magnetoencephalographic methods used to study the spontaneous and evoked field potentials of the brain. Some examples of clinical applications are included, where appropriate.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2000

Cellular localization of lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase (β-trace) in the central nervous system of the adult rat

Matthew A. Howard; Igor O. Volkov; R. Mirsky; P. C. Garell; M. D. Noh; Mark A. Granner; Hanna Damasio; Mitchell Steinschneider; Richard A. Reale; J. E. Hind; John F. Brugge

The human superior temporal cortex plays a critical role in hearing, speech, and language, yet its functional organization is poorly understood. Evoked potentials (EPs) to auditory click‐train stimulation presented binaurally were recorded chronically from penetrating electrodes implanted in Heschls gyrus (HG), from pial‐surface electrodes placed on the lateral superior temporal gyrus (STG), or from both simultaneously, in awake humans undergoing surgery for medically intractable epilepsy. The distribution of averaged EPs was restricted to a relatively small area on the lateral surface of the posterior STG. In several cases, there were multiple foci of high amplitude EPs lying along this acoustically active portion of STG. EPs recorded simultaneously from HG and STG differed in their sensitivities to general anesthesia and to changes in rate of stimulus presentation. Results indicate that the acoustically active region on the STG is a separate auditory area, functionally distinct from the HG auditory field(s). We refer to this acoustically sensitive area of the STG as the posterior lateral superior temporal area (PLST). Electrical stimulation of HG resulted in short‐latency EPs in an area that overlaps PLST, indicating that PLST receives a corticocortical input, either directly or indirectly, from HG. These physiological findings are in accord with anatomic evidence in humans and in nonhuman primates that the superior temporal cortex contains multiple interconnected auditory areas. J. Comp. Neurol. 416:79–92, 2000.

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Matthew A. Howard

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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John F. Brugge

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Mitchell Steinschneider

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Mark A. Granner

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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Richard A. Reale

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Hanna Damasio

University of Southern California

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M. D. Noh

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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