Ripple oscillations in the left temporal neocortex are associated with impaired verbal episodic memory encoding
Zachary J. Waldman, Liliana Camarillo-Rodriguez, Inna Chervenova,, Brent Berry, Shoichi Shimamoto, Bahareh Elahian, Michal Kucewicz, Chaitanya, Ganne, Xiao-Song He, Leon A. Davis, Joel Stein, Sandhitsu Das, Richard, Gorniak, Ashwini D. Sharan, Robert Gross, Cory S. Inman

TL;DR
This study investigates how ripple oscillations in the left temporal neocortex, especially during word encoding, are linked to impaired verbal episodic memory in epilepsy patients, revealing a negative impact of these neural events.
Contribution
It identifies specific ripple and spike events in the left temporal neocortex that correlate with decreased memory encoding success, highlighting their disruptive role.
Findings
Ripple on spike events are more frequent in the seizure onset zone.
Ripple events in the left temporal neocortex are associated with reduced recall probability.
Spikes and ripple on spike events in the left middle temporal gyrus significantly impair memory encoding.
Abstract
Background: We sought to determine if ripple oscillations (80-120Hz), detected in intracranial EEG (iEEG) recordings of epilepsy patients, correlate with an enhancement or disruption of verbal episodic memory encoding. Methods: We defined ripple and spike events in depth iEEG recordings during list learning in 107 patients with focal epilepsy. We used logistic regression models (LRMs) to investigate the relationship between the occurrence of ripple and spike events during word presentation and the odds of successful word recall following a distractor epoch, and included the seizure onset zone (SOZ) as a covariate in the LRMs. Results: We detected events during 58,312 word presentation trials from 7,630 unique electrode sites. The probability of ripple on spike (RonS) events was increased in the seizure onset zone (SOZ, p<0.04). In the left temporal neocortex RonS events during word…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEEG and Brain-Computer Interfaces · Epilepsy research and treatment · Neural dynamics and brain function
