Spatiotemporal Network Dynamics and Structural Correlates in the Human Cerebral Cortex in Vitro
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Elucidating human cerebral cortex function is essential for understanding the physiological basis of both healthy and pathological brain states. We obtained extracellular local field potential recordings from slices of neocortical tissue from refractory epilepsy patients. Multi-electrode recordings were combined with histological information, providing a two-dimensional spatiotemporal characterization of human cortical dynamics in control conditions and following modulation of the excitation/inhibition balance. Slices expressed spontaneous rhythmic activity consistent with slow wave activity, comprising alternating active (Up) and silent (Down) states (Up-duration: 0.08 ± 0.03 s, Down-duration: 2.62 ± 2.12 s, frequency: 0.75 ± 0.39 Hz). Up states propagated from deep to superficial layers, with faster propagation speeds than in other species (vertical: 64.6 mm/s; horizontal: 65.9 mm/s). GABA blockade progressively transformed the emergent activity into epileptiform discharges, marked by higher firing rates, faster network recruitment and propagation, and infraslow rhythmicity (0.01 Hz). This dynamical characterization broadens our understanding of the mechanistic organization of the human cortical network at the micro- and mesoscale.