Détail du document
Identifiant

oai:HAL:hal-02929529v1

Sujet
Emotional prosody Local-field potentials Oscillations Parkinson's disease Right hemisphere Side of onset Subthalamic nucleus Theta alpha delta and gamma bands Time-frequency [SDV.NEU]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Neu...
Auteur
Bénis, Damien Haegelen, Claire Voruz, Philippe Pierce, Jordan Milesi, Valérie Houvenaghel, Jean-François Verin, Marc Sauleau, Paul Grandjean, Didier Péron, Julie
Langue
en
Editeur

HAL CCSD;Elsevier

Catégorie

sciences : sciences du vivant

Année

2020

Date de référencement

15/12/2023

Mots clés
parkinson asymmetry onset response prosody subthalamic emotion nucleus band disease responses pd patients stn
Métrique

Résumé

International audience; The subthalamic nucleus (STN) is involved in different aspects of emotional processes and more specifically in emotional prosody recognition.

Recent studies on the behavioral effects of deep brain stimulation (DBS) in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD) have uncovered an asymmetry in vocal emotion decoding in PD, with left-onset PD patients showing deficits for the processing of happy voices.

Whether and how PD asymmetry affects STN electrophysiological responses to emotional prosody, however, remains unknown.

In the current study, local field potential activity was recorded from eight left- and six right-lateralized motor-onset PD patients (LOPD/ROPD) undergoing DBS electrodes implantation, while they listened to angry, happy and neutral voices.

Time-frequency decomposition revealed that theta (2-6 Hz), alpha (6-12 Hz) and gamma (60-150 Hz) band responses to emotion were mostly bilateral with a differential pattern of response according to patient's sides-of onset.

Conversely, beta-band (12-20 Hz and 20-30 Hz) emotional responses were mostly lateralized in the left STN for both patient groups.

Furthermore, STN theta, alpha and gamma band responses to happiness were either absent (theta band) or reduced (alpha and gamma band) in the most affected STN hemisphere (contralateral to the side-of onset), while a late low-beta band left STN happiness-specific response was present in ROPD patients and did not occur in LOPD patients.

Altogether, in this study, we demonstrate a complex pattern of oscillatory activity in the human STN in response to emotional voices and reveal a crucial influence of disease laterality on STN low-frequency oscillatory activity.

Bénis, Damien,Haegelen, Claire,Voruz, Philippe,Pierce, Jordan,Milesi, Valérie,Houvenaghel, Jean-François,Verin, Marc,Sauleau, Paul,Grandjean, Didier,Péron, Julie, 2020, Subthalamic nucleus oscillations during vocal emotion processing are dependent of the motor asymmetry of Parkinson's disease, HAL CCSD;Elsevier

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