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crossfrequency

Crossfrequency, in neuroscience and signal processing, denotes the interaction between neural oscillations at different frequency bands. It is commonly referred to as cross-frequency coupling (CFC). Researchers study how slow rhythms modulate the timing or amplitude of faster rhythms, and sometimes how faster activity influences slower processes, to understand coordinated activity across brain networks.

The most studied forms are phase-amplitude coupling, in which the phase of a low-frequency oscillation modulates

Analysis typically uses band-pass filtering and the Hilbert transform to extract instantaneous phase and amplitude. Metrics

Crossfrequency coupling has been observed in EEG, MEG, intracranial EEG, and local field potentials in animals.

Interpretation requires caution due to non-sinusoidal waveforms, non-stationarity, and potential artifacts from filtering or volume conduction.

the
amplitude
of
a
high-frequency
oscillation;
phase-phase
coupling,
where
the
phases
of
two
bands
align;
and
amplitude-amplitude
coupling,
where
the
envelopes
of
two
bands
co-vary.
These
interactions
can
occur
within
a
cortical
region
or
across
distant
areas,
and
may
reflect
communication
between
neural
ensembles
or
hierarchical
organization
of
processing.
include
modulation
index
for
PAC,
coherence-
or
phase-locking-based
measures
for
PPC,
and
correlation
of
envelopes
for
AAC.
Comodulograms
visualize
coupling
across
pairs
of
frequency
bands.
Statistical
validation
often
employs
surrogate
data
and
multiple
comparison
controls
to
assess
significance.
It
is
associated
with
cognitive
processes
such
as
memory
formation,
attention,
perception,
and
motor
control.
In
clinical
contexts,
altered
CFC
has
been
reported
in
epilepsy,
schizophrenia,
Parkinson’s
disease,
and
aging,
and
it
is
explored
for
biomarker
development
and
brain-computer
interfaces.
Robust
analysis
combines
multiple
metrics
and
appropriate
controls
to
distinguish
true
interactions
from
spurious
effects.