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      Cognitive functions of gamma-band activity: memory match and utilization.

      Trends in Cognitive Sciences
      Animals, Cognition, physiology, Electroencephalography, Evoked Potentials, Feedback, Haplorhini, Humans, Magnetoencephalography, Memory, Motor Neurons, Gamma, Neural Pathways, Neuronal Plasticity, Receptors, Cholinergic, Signal Detection, Psychological, Synapses

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          Abstract

          Oscillatory neural activity in the gamma frequency range (>30Hz) has been shown to accompany a wide variety of cognitive processes. So far, there has been limited success in assigning a unitary basic function to these oscillations, and critics have raised the argument that they could just be an epiphenomenon of neural processing. We propose a new framework that relates gamma oscillations observed in human, as well as in animal, experiments to two underlying processes: the comparison of memory contents with stimulus-related information and the utilization of signals derived from this comparison. This model attempts to explain early gamma-band responses in terms of the match between bottom-up and top-down information. Furthermore, it assumes that late gamma-band activity reflects the readout and utilization of the information resulting from this match.

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