Jochen Kaiser
Goethe University Frankfurt
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Featured researches published by Jochen Kaiser.
Trends in Neurosciences | 2007
Ole Jensen; Jochen Kaiser; Jean-Philippe Lachaux
Both theoretical and experimental animal work supports the hypothesis that transient oscillatory synchronization of neuronal assemblies at gamma frequencies (30-100 Hz) is closely associated with sensory processing. Recent data from recordings in animals and humans have suggested that gamma-frequency activity also has an important role in attention and both working and long-term memory. The involvement of gamma-band synchronization in various cognitive paradigms in humans is currently being investigated using intracranial and high-density electro- and magnetoencephalography recordings. Here, we discuss recent findings demonstrating human gamma-frequency activity associated with attention and memory in both sensory and non-sensory areas. Because oscillatory gamma-frequency activity has an important role in neuronal communication and synaptic plasticity, it could provide a key for understanding neuronal processing in both local and distributed cortical networks engaged in complex cognitive functions. This review is part of the INMED/TINS special issue Physiogenic and pathogenic oscillations: the beauty and the beast, based on presentations at the annual INMED/TINS symposium (http://inmednet.com).
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2014
Agnes J. Jasinska; Elliot A. Stein; Jochen Kaiser; Marcus J. Naumer; Yavor Yalachkov
Human neuroimaging studies suggest that neural cue reactivity is strongly associated with indices of drug use, including addiction severity and treatment success. However, little is known about factors that modulate cue reactivity. The goal of this review, in which we survey published fMRI and PET studies on drug cue reactivity in cocaine, alcohol, and tobacco cigarette users, is to highlight major factors that modulate brain reactivity to drug cues. First, we describe cue reactivity paradigms used in neuroimaging research and outline the brain circuits that underlie cue reactivity. We then discuss major factors that have been shown to modulate cue reactivity and review specific evidence as well as outstanding questions related to each factor. Building on previous model-building reviews on the topic, we then outline a simplified model that includes the key modulatory factors and a tentative ranking of their relative impact. We conclude with a discussion of outstanding challenges and future research directions, which can inform future neuroimaging studies as well as the design of treatment and prevention programs.
The Neuroscientist | 2003
Jochen Kaiser; Werner Lutzenberger
Oscillatory activity in the gamma-band range has been related both to gestalt perception and to cognitive functions such as attention, learning, and memory. After giving a brief account of recent findings from electroencephalography and intracortical recordings, the present review will focus on spectral activity in the magnetoencephalogram. Here, gamma-band effects are topographically more local and involve higher frequencies than in the electroencephalogram. Bottom-up-driven auditory spatial mismatch detection elicits gamma-band activity over posterior parietal cortex, whereas auditory pattern mismatch processing leads to gamma-band enhancements over anterior temporal and inferior frontal regions. These topographies support representations of auditory spatial and pattern information in the putative dual auditory “where” and “what” pathways, respectively. During top-down-guided auditory spatial and pattern-working memory tasks, prefrontal gamma-band increases are observed in addition to activations over putative auditory stream areas. Moreover, stimulus maintenance in working memory is accompanied by coherence increases between sensory and prefrontal regions. Gamma-band topographies in magnetoencephalogram are highly comparable with hemodynamic brain imaging studies but yield additional information on the temporal dynamics of activations and connectivity patterns. In summary, magnetoencephalographic gammaband activity revealed both local synchronization patterns and cortico-cortical interactions accompanying cognitive processes at a good spatial and high temporal resolution.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2007
Grit Hein; Oliver Doehrmann; Notger G. Müller; Jochen Kaiser; Lars Muckli; Marcus J. Naumer
The cortical integration of auditory and visual features is crucial for efficient object recognition. Previous studies have shown that audiovisual (AV) integration is affected by where and when auditory and visual features occur. However, because relatively little is known about the impact of what is integrated, we here investigated the impact of semantic congruency and object familiarity on the neural correlates of AV integration. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify regions involved in the integration of both (congruent and incongruent) familiar animal sounds and images and of arbitrary combinations of unfamiliar artificial sounds and object images. Unfamiliar object images and sounds were integrated in the inferior frontal cortex (IFC), possibly reflecting learning of novel AV associations. Integration of familiar, but semantically incongruent combinations also correlated with IFC activation and additionally involved the posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS). For highly familiar semantically congruent AV pairings, we again found AV integration effects in pSTS and additionally in superior temporal gyrus. These findings demonstrate that the neural correlates of object-related AV integration reflect both semantic congruency and familiarity of the integrated sounds and images.
Neuroreport | 2005
Jochen Kaiser; Werner Lutzenberger
This review highlights recent developments in research on human cortical oscillations in the gamma-band range (30-100 Hz). Electroencephalography has demonstrated a role of these signals for cognitive functions including visual perception, attention, learning and memory. During auditory processing, magnetoencephalogram has identified oscillatory activity in higher frequency ranges and with a more discrete localization than electroencephalogram. Gamma-band activity increases have been observed in the putative auditory dorsal and ventral processing streams during the processing of auditory spatial and pattern information, respectively. Additional gamma-band activity has been found over the frontal cortex during top-down tasks. Oscillatory activity in the gamma range may serve to assess the temporal dynamics of cortical networks and their interactions.
Progress in Biophysics & Molecular Biology | 2011
Michael Wibral; Benjamin Rahm; Maria Rieder; Michael Lindner; Raul Vicente; Jochen Kaiser
The analysis of cortical and subcortical networks requires the identification of their nodes, and of the topology and dynamics of their interactions. Exploratory tools for the identification of nodes are available, e.g. magnetoencephalography (MEG) in combination with beamformer source analysis. Competing network topologies and interaction models can be investigated using dynamic causal modelling. However, we lack a method for the exploratory investigation of network topologies to choose from the very large number of possible network graphs. Ideally, this method should not require a pre-specified model of the interaction. Transfer entropy--an information theoretic implementation of Wiener-type causality--is a method for the investigation of causal interactions (or information flow) that is independent of a pre-specified interaction model. We analysed MEG data from an auditory short-term memory experiment to assess whether the reconfiguration of networks implied in this task can be detected using transfer entropy. Transfer entropy analysis of MEG source-level signals detected changes in the network between the different task types. These changes prominently involved the left temporal pole and cerebellum--structures that have previously been implied in auditory short-term or working memory. Thus, the analysis of information flow with transfer entropy at the source-level may be used to derive hypotheses for further model-based testing.
International Journal of Psychophysiology | 1997
Jochen Kaiser; Robert Barker; Corinna Haenschel; Torsten Baldeweg; John Gruzelier
A model of frontal inhibition in hypnosis was elucidated by examining with cortical evoked potentials error negativity and positivity in 23 low versus medium/high hypnotisables during a perceptual task which included trials with conflicting stimulus information. In susceptible subjects the number of correct responses was found to be smaller for trials with incongruent stimulus information with hypnosis when compared with baseline. While the early negative wave to incorrect responses tended to be higher in susceptible subjects, this wave was no longer followed by a late positivity, posited to reflect a failure to process further the error-related information. The results with hypnosis are interpreted as a failure of context updating without a global deficit in supervisory attention.
Brain Research | 2006
Susanne Leiberg; Werner Lutzenberger; Jochen Kaiser
The present magnetoencephalography study investigated memory load-dependent changes in cortical oscillatory activity during a modified auditory version of the Sternberg paradigm. Twelve subjects were presented with test stimulus sets of 1-3 syllables spoken in a natural female voice. After an 800-ms delay period, a probe syllable was presented and subjects had to judge whether the probe had been included in the preceding test set. Compared to a non-memory-control task, memory trials elicited an increase of beta activity over right temporal regions and an increase of alpha activity over right middle prefrontal cortex at the end of the delay phase. Monotonic increases in spectral amplitude as a function of memory load were revealed for the beta band over right temporal sensors and the alpha band over right frontal sensors during the delay period. The results demonstrate the relevance of both beta and alpha oscillations for the memorization of multiple stimuli. The former may be associated with the representation of task-relevant stimulus features, while the latter may reflect the top-down control of these representations.
The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009
Yavor Yalachkov; Jochen Kaiser; Marcus J. Naumer
In addition to reward- and craving-related processes, habitual mechanisms play an important role in addiction. While the dorsal striatum has been proposed to code for the motivational state of habitual drug-seeking actions, the neural underpinnings of the corresponding drug-taking skills and action knowledge remain poorly understood. We used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and a behavioral orientation affordance paradigm to investigate the neural and behavioral correlates of automatized drug-taking actions in nicotine dependence. Smokers exhibited higher fMRI activations than nonsmokers when viewing smoking-related but not when viewing control images. These group differences in fMRI activations were located not only in brain regions associated with craving and habitual learning (left ventral and dorsal striatum, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, insula, uncus, medial frontal gyrus, right subcallosal gyrus, and bilateral parahippocampal gyrus), but also in a network of brain regions which has been strongly implicated in the encoding of action knowledge and tool use skills (bilateral premotor cortex, left superior parietal lobule, and right lateral cerebellum). A behavioral affordance reaction-time task indicated that smokers, but not nonsmokers, showed an automatized responsiveness to smoking paraphernalia similar to everyday objects. Moreover, smokers showed strong intercorrelations between fMRI activations in tool use-related brain regions, behavioral responsiveness to smoking-related cues, and severity of nicotine dependence. Apparently smoking-related action representations in smokers are stored in brain regions typically representing tool use skills and action knowledge. Most importantly, cortical and behavioral correlates of the respective drug-taking skills vary with the individual degree of nicotine dependence.
Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews | 2012
Yavor Yalachkov; Jochen Kaiser; Marcus J. Naumer
Neuroimaging studies on cue reactivity have substantially contributed to the understanding of addiction. In the majority of studies drug cues were presented in the visual modality. However, exposure to conditioned cues in real life occurs often simultaneously in more than one sensory modality. Therefore, multisensory cues should elicit cue reactivity more consistently than unisensory stimuli and increase the ecological validity and the reliability of brain activation measurements. This review includes the data from 44 whole-brain functional neuroimaging studies with a total of 1168 subjects (812 patients and 356 controls). Correlations between neural cue reactivity and clinical covariates such as craving have been reported significantly more often for multisensory than unisensory cues in the motor cortex, insula and posterior cingulate cortex. Thus, multisensory drug cues are particularly effective in revealing brain-behavior relationships in neurocircuits of addiction responsible for motivation, craving awareness and self-related processing.