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. 2018 Feb 1;8:2055. doi: 10.1038/s41598-018-20662-0

Figure 5.

Figure 5

Superficial slow rhythms are phase-reset by infrequent stimuli in an auditory oddball task. (a) The average time-domain difference of the LFPg response to infrequent and frequent stimuli (infrequent-frequent) reveals a significant difference in superficial layers at ~400–800 ms after the stimulus in a representative subject. Black lines outline the cluster of channels and time points in which this effect was significant (Nonparametric permutation cluster test, p < 0.01) (b) Slow activity (<3 Hz) is phase locked by infrequent stimuli in superficial channels. As in Fig. 5a, lines border the significant cluster (Nonparametric permutation cluster test, p < 0.01). (c) Single-trial raw data from a superficial channel indicates that infrequent stimuli reset the phase of an ongoing slow oscillation; the channel’s time domain average is overlaid.