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Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration

Multisensory integration is quintessential to adaptive behavior, with clinical populations showing significant impairments in this domain, most notably hallucinatory reports. Interestingly, altered cross-modal interactions have also been reported in healthy individuals when engaged in tasks such as...

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Autores principales: Bertaccini, Riccardo, Ippolito, Giuseppe, Tarasi, Luca, Zazio, Agnese, Stango, Antonietta, Bortoletto, Marta, Romei, Vincenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10295966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37371840
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11061746
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author Bertaccini, Riccardo
Ippolito, Giuseppe
Tarasi, Luca
Zazio, Agnese
Stango, Antonietta
Bortoletto, Marta
Romei, Vincenzo
author_facet Bertaccini, Riccardo
Ippolito, Giuseppe
Tarasi, Luca
Zazio, Agnese
Stango, Antonietta
Bortoletto, Marta
Romei, Vincenzo
author_sort Bertaccini, Riccardo
collection PubMed
description Multisensory integration is quintessential to adaptive behavior, with clinical populations showing significant impairments in this domain, most notably hallucinatory reports. Interestingly, altered cross-modal interactions have also been reported in healthy individuals when engaged in tasks such as the Sound-Induced Flash-Illusion (SIFI). The temporal dynamics of the SIFI have been recently tied to the speed of occipital alpha rhythms (IAF), with faster oscillations entailing reduced temporal windows within which the illusion is experienced. In this regard, entrainment-based protocols have not yet implemented rhythmic transcranial magnetic stimulation (rhTMS) to causally test for this relationship. It thus remains to be evaluated whether rhTMS-induced acoustic and somatosensory sensations may not specifically interfere with the illusion. Here, we addressed this issue by asking 27 volunteers to perform a SIFI paradigm under different Sham and active rhTMS protocols, delivered over the occipital pole at the IAF. Although TMS has been proven to act upon brain tissues excitability, results show that the SIFI occurred for both Sham and active rhTMS, with the illusory rate not being significantly different between baseline and stimulation conditions. This aligns with the discrete sampling hypothesis, for which alpha amplitude modulation, known to reflect changes in cortical excitability, should not account for changes in the illusory rate. Moreover, these findings highlight the viability of rhTMS-based interventions as a means to probe the neuroelectric signatures of illusory and hallucinatory audiovisual experiences, in healthy and neuropsychiatric populations.
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spelling pubmed-102959662023-06-28 Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration Bertaccini, Riccardo Ippolito, Giuseppe Tarasi, Luca Zazio, Agnese Stango, Antonietta Bortoletto, Marta Romei, Vincenzo Biomedicines Article Multisensory integration is quintessential to adaptive behavior, with clinical populations showing significant impairments in this domain, most notably hallucinatory reports. Interestingly, altered cross-modal interactions have also been reported in healthy individuals when engaged in tasks such as the Sound-Induced Flash-Illusion (SIFI). The temporal dynamics of the SIFI have been recently tied to the speed of occipital alpha rhythms (IAF), with faster oscillations entailing reduced temporal windows within which the illusion is experienced. In this regard, entrainment-based protocols have not yet implemented rhythmic transcranial magnetic stimulation (rhTMS) to causally test for this relationship. It thus remains to be evaluated whether rhTMS-induced acoustic and somatosensory sensations may not specifically interfere with the illusion. Here, we addressed this issue by asking 27 volunteers to perform a SIFI paradigm under different Sham and active rhTMS protocols, delivered over the occipital pole at the IAF. Although TMS has been proven to act upon brain tissues excitability, results show that the SIFI occurred for both Sham and active rhTMS, with the illusory rate not being significantly different between baseline and stimulation conditions. This aligns with the discrete sampling hypothesis, for which alpha amplitude modulation, known to reflect changes in cortical excitability, should not account for changes in the illusory rate. Moreover, these findings highlight the viability of rhTMS-based interventions as a means to probe the neuroelectric signatures of illusory and hallucinatory audiovisual experiences, in healthy and neuropsychiatric populations. MDPI 2023-06-17 /pmc/articles/PMC10295966/ /pubmed/37371840 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11061746 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bertaccini, Riccardo
Ippolito, Giuseppe
Tarasi, Luca
Zazio, Agnese
Stango, Antonietta
Bortoletto, Marta
Romei, Vincenzo
Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration
title Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration
title_full Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration
title_fullStr Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration
title_full_unstemmed Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration
title_short Rhythmic TMS as a Feasible Tool to Uncover the Oscillatory Signatures of Audiovisual Integration
title_sort rhythmic tms as a feasible tool to uncover the oscillatory signatures of audiovisual integration
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10295966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37371840
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines11061746
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