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Dive into the research topics where Stephen D. Hall is active.

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Featured researches published by Stephen D. Hall.


NeuroImage | 2005

The missing link: analogous human and primate cortical gamma oscillations

Stephen D. Hall; Ian E. Holliday; Arjan Hillebrand; Krish Devi Singh; Paul L. Furlong; Avgis Hadjipapas; Gareth R. Barnes

Recent animal studies highlighting the relationship between functional imaging signals and the underlying neuronal activity have revealed the potential capabilities of non-invasive methods. However, the valuable exchange of information between animal and human studies remains restricted by the limited evidence of direct physiological links between species. In this study we used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to investigate the occurrence of 30-70 Hz (gamma) oscillations in human visual cortex, induced by the presentation of visual stimuli of varying contrast. These oscillations, well described in the animal literature, were observed in retinotopically concordant locations of visual cortex and show striking similarity to those found in primate visual cortex using surgically implanted electrodes. The amplitude of the gamma oscillations increases linearly with stimulus contrast in strong correlation with the gamma oscillations found in the local field potential (LFP) of the macaque. We demonstrate that non-invasive magnetic field measurements of gamma oscillations in human visual cortex concur with invasive measures of activation in primate visual cortex, suggesting both a direct representation of underlying neuronal activity and a concurrence between human and primate cortical activity.


NeuroImage | 2011

The role of GABAergic modulation in motor function related neuronal network activity

Stephen D. Hall; Ian M. Stanford; Naoki Yamawaki; Craig J. McAllister; Kim C. Rönnqvist; Gavin L. Woodhall; Paul L. Furlong

At rest, the primary motor cortex (M1) exhibits spontaneous neuronal network oscillations in the beta (15-30 Hz) frequency range, mediated by inhibitory interneuron drive via GABA-A receptors. However, questions remain regarding the neuropharmacological basis of movement related oscillatory phenomena, such as movement related beta desynchronisation (MRBD), post-movement beta rebound (PMBR) and movement related gamma synchronisation (MRGS). To address this, we used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to study the movement related oscillatory changes in M1 cortex of eight healthy participants, following administration of the GABA-A modulator diazepam. Results demonstrate that, contrary to initial hypotheses, neither MRGS nor PMBR appear to be GABA-A dependent, whilst the MRBD is facilitated by increased GABAergic drive. These data demonstrate that while movement-related beta changes appear to be dependent upon spontaneous beta oscillations, they occur independently of one other. Crucially, MRBD is a GABA-A mediated process, offering a possible mechanism by which motor function may be modulated. However, in contrast, the transient increase in synchronous power observed in PMBR and MRGS appears to be generated by a non-GABA-A receptor mediated process; the elucidation of which may offer important insights into motor processes.


Neuroscience | 2008

Pharmacologically induced and stimulus evoked rhythmic neuronal oscillatory activity in the primary motor cortex in vitro

Naoki Yamawaki; Ian M. Stanford; Stephen D. Hall; Gavin L. Woodhall

Parkinsons disease (PD) is associated with enhanced synchronization of neuronal network activity in the beta (15-30 Hz) frequency band across several nuclei of the basal ganglia (BG). Deep brain stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus (STN) appears to reduce this pathological oscillation, thereby alleviating PD symptoms. However, direct stimulation of primary motor cortex (M1) has recently been shown to be effective in reducing symptoms in PD, suggesting a role for cortex in patterning pathological rhythms. Here, we examine the properties of M1 network oscillations in coronal slices taken from rat brain. Oscillations in the high beta frequency range (layer 5, 27.8+/-1.1 Hz, n=6) were elicited by co-application of the glutamate receptor agonist kainic acid (400 nM) and muscarinic receptor agonist carbachol (50 microM). Dual extracellular recordings, local application of tetrodotoxin and recordings in M1 micro-sections indicate that the activity originates within deep layers V/VI. Beta oscillations were unaffected by specific AMPA receptor blockade, abolished by the GABA type A receptor (GABA(A)R) antagonist picrotoxin and the gap-junction blocker carbenoxolone, and modulated by pentobarbital and zolpidem indicating dependence on networks of GABAergic interneurons and electrical coupling. High frequency stimulation (HFS) at 125 Hz in superficial layers, designed to mimic transdural/transcranial stimulation, generated gamma oscillations in layers II and V (incidence 95%, 69.2+/-7.3 Hz, n=17) with very fast oscillatory components (VFO; 100-250 Hz). Stimulation at 4 Hz, however, preferentially promoted theta activity (incidence 62.5%, 5.1+/-0.6 Hz, n=15) that effected strong amplitude modulation of ongoing beta activity. Stimulation at 20 Hz evoked mixed theta and gamma responses. These data suggest that within M1, evoked theta, gamma and fast oscillations may coexist with and in some cases modulate pharmacologically induced beta oscillations.


Human Brain Mapping | 2009

Neuronal network pharmacodynamics of GABAergic modulation in the human cortex determined using pharmaco-magnetoencephalography†

Stephen D. Hall; Gareth R. Barnes; Paul L. Furlong; Stefano Seri; Arjan Hillebrand

Neuronal network oscillations are a unifying phenomenon in neuroscience research, with comparable measurements across scales and species. Cortical oscillations are of central importance in the characterization of neuronal network function in health and disease and are influential in effective drug development. Whilst animal in vitro and in vivo electrophysiology is able to characterize pharmacologically induced modulations in neuronal activity, present human counterparts have spatial and temporal limitations. Consequently, the potential applications for a human equivalent are extensive. Here, we demonstrate a novel implementation of contemporary neuroimaging methods called pharmaco‐magnetoencephalography. This approach determines the spatial profile of neuronal network oscillatory power change across the cortex following drug administration and reconstructs the time course of these modulations at focal regions of interest. As a proof of concept, we characterize the nonspecific GABAergic modulator diazepam, which has a broad range of therapeutic applications. We demonstrate that diazepam variously modulates θ (4–7 Hz), α (7–14 Hz), β (15–25 Hz), and γ (30–80 Hz) frequency oscillations in specific regions of the cortex, with a pharmacodynamic profile consistent with that of drug uptake. We examine the relevance of these results with regard to the spatial and temporal observations from other modalities and the various therapeutic consequences of diazepam and discuss the potential applications of such an approach in terms of drug development and translational neuroscience. Hum Brain Mapp, 2010.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Sustained neuronal activity generated by glial plasticity

Tiina Pirttimäki; Stephen D. Hall; Harri Parri

Astrocytes release gliotransmitters, notably glutamate, that can affect neuronal and synaptic activity. In particular, astrocytic glutamate release results in the generation of NMDA receptor (NMDA-R)-mediated slow inward currents (SICs) in neurons. However, factors underlying the emergence of SICs and their physiological roles are essentially unknown. Here we show that, in acute slices of rat somatosensory thalamus, stimulation of lemniscal or cortical afferents results in a sustained increase of SICs in thalamocortical (TC) neurons that outlasts the duration of the stimulus by 1 h. This long-term enhancement of astrocytic glutamate release is induced by group I metabotropic glutamate receptors and is dependent on astrocytic intracellular calcium. Neuronal SICs are mediated by extrasynaptic NR2B subunit-containing NMDA-Rs and are capable of eliciting bursts. These are distinct from T-type Ca2+ channel-dependent bursts of action potentials and are synchronized in neighboring TC neurons. These findings describe a previously unrecognized form of excitatory, nonsynaptic plasticity in the CNS that feeds forward to generate local neuronal firing long after stimulus termination.


NeuroImage | 2004

A general linear model for MEG beamformer imaging

Matthew J. Brookes; Andrew M. Gibson; Stephen D. Hall; Paul L. Furlong; Gareth R. Barnes; Arjan Hillebrand; Krish Devi Singh; Ian E. Holliday; Peter G. Morris

A new general linear model (GLM) beamformer method is described for processing magnetoencephalography (MEG) data. A standard nonlinear beamformer is used to determine the time course of neuronal activation for each point in a predefined source space. A Hilbert transform gives the envelope of oscillatory activity at each location in any chosen frequency band (not necessary in the case of sustained (DC) fields), enabling the general linear model to be applied and a volumetric T statistic image to be determined. The new method is illustrated by a two-source simulation (sustained field and 20 Hz) and is shown to provide accurate localization. The method is also shown to locate accurately the increasing and decreasing gamma activities to the temporal and frontal lobes, respectively, in the case of a scintillating scotoma. The new method brings the advantages of the general linear model to the analysis of MEG data and should prove useful for the localization of changing patterns of activity across all frequency ranges including DC (sustained fields).


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2010

GABA(A) alpha-1 subunit mediated desynchronization of elevated low frequency oscillations alleviates specific dysfunction in stroke – A case report

Stephen D. Hall; Naoki Yamawaki; Alison E. Fisher; Ralf P. Clauss; Gavin L. Woodhall; Ian M. Stanford

OBJECTIVE The paradoxical effects of the hypnotic imidazopyridine zolpidem, widely reported in persistent vegetative state, have been replicated recently in brain-injured and cognitively impaired patients. However, the neuronal mechanisms underlying these benefits are yet to be demonstrated. We implemented contemporary neuroimaging methods to investigate sensorimotor and cognitive improvements, observed in stroke patient JP following zolpidem administration. METHODS We used Magnetic-Resonance-Imaging (MRI) and Magnetic-Resonance-Spectroscopy (MRS) to anatomically and chemically characterize stroke damage. Single-photon-emission-computed-tomography (SPECT) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) were used to identify changes in cerebrovascular perfusion and neuronal network activity in response to sub-sedative doses of zolpidem, zopiclone and placebo. Cognitive improvements were measured using the WAIS-III and auditory-verbal tasks. RESULTS MRI and MRS revealed a lesion with complete loss of neuronal viability in the left temporal-parietal region; whilst SPECT indicated improved perfusion in the affected hemisphere following zolpidem. MEG demonstrated high-amplitude theta (4-10 Hz) and beta (15-30 Hz) oscillations within the peri-infarct region, which reduced in power coincident with zolpidem uptake and improvements in cognitive and motor function. CONCLUSIONS In JP, functional deficits and pathological oscillations appear coincidentally reduced following administration of low-dose zolpidem. SIGNIFICANCE GABA(A) alpha-1 sensitive desynchronisation of pathological oscillations may represent a biomarker and potential therapeutic target in brain injury.


Clinical Neurophysiology | 2005

Distinct contrast response functions in striate and extra-striate regions of visual cortex revealed with magnetoencephalography (MEG).

Stephen D. Hall; Ian E. Holliday; Arjan Hillebrand; Paul L. Furlong; Krish Devi Singh; Gareth R. Barnes

OBJECTIVE To spatially and temporally characterise the cortical contrast response function to pattern onset stimuli in humans. METHODS Magnetoencephalography (MEG) was used to investigate the human cortical contrast response function to pattern onset stimuli with high temporal and spatial resolution. A beamformer source reconstruction approach was used to spatially localise and identify the time courses of activity at various visual cortical loci. RESULTS Consistent with the findings of previous studies, MEG beamformer analysis revealed two simultaneous generators of the pattern onset evoked response. These generators arose from anatomically discrete locations in striate and extra-striate visual cortex. Furthermore, these loci demonstrated notably distinct contrast response functions, with striate cortex increasing approximately linearly with contrast, whilst extra-striate visual cortex followed a saturating function. CONCLUSIONS The generators that underlie the pattern onset visual evoked response arise from two distinct regions in striate and extra-striate visual cortex. SIGNIFICANCE The spatially, temporally and functionally distinct mechanisms of contrast processing within the visual cortex may account for the disparate results observed across earlier studies and assist in elucidating causal mechanisms of aberrant contrast processing in neurological disorders.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2011

Primary and secondary somatosensory cortex responses to anticipation and pain: a magnetoencephalography study

Siân F. Worthen; Anthony Hobson; Stephen D. Hall; Qasim Aziz; Paul L. Furlong

Several brain regions, including the primary and secondary somatosensory cortices (SI and SII, respectively), are functionally active during the pain experience. Both of these regions are thought to be involved in the sensory–discriminative processing of pain and recent evidence suggests that SI in particular may also be involved in more affective processing. In this study we used MEG to investigate the hypothesis that frequency‐specific oscillatory activity may be differentially associated with the sensory and affective components of pain. In eight healthy participants (four male), MEG was recorded during a visceral pain experiment comprising baseline, anticipation, pain and post‐pain phases. Pain was delivered via intraluminal oesophageal balloon distension (four stimuli at 1 Hz). Significant bilateral but asymmetrical changes in neural activity occurred in the β‐band within SI and SII. In SI, a continuous increase in neural activity occurred during the anticipation phase (20–30 Hz), which continued during the pain phase but at a lower frequency (10–15 Hz). In SII, oscillatory changes only occurred during the pain phase, predominantly in the 20–30 Hz β band, and were coincident with the stimulus. These data provide novel evidence of functional diversity within SI, indicating a role in attentional and sensory aspects of pain processing. In SII, oscillatory changes were predominantly stimulus‐related, indicating a role in encoding the characteristics of the stimulus. We therefore provide objective evidence of functional heterogeneity within SI and functional segregation between SI and SII, and suggest that the temporal and frequency dynamics within cortical regions may offer valuable insights into pain processing.


Headache | 2004

Spatio-temporal imaging of cortical desynchronization in migraine visual aura: A magnetoencephalography case study

Stephen D. Hall; Gareth R. Barnes; Arjan Hillebrand; Paul L. Furlong; Krish Devi Singh; Ian E. Holliday

Objective.—To determine cortical oscillatory changes involved in migraine visual aura using magnetoencephalography (MEG).

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Gareth R. Barnes

Wellcome Trust Centre for Neuroimaging

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