A human intracranial map of consciousness returning from anesthesia

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Abstract

How consciousness arises from the brain remains a central yet unsolved question. Although substantial effort has been devoted to characterizing the neural correlates of conscious perception during wakefulness, how consciousness re-emerges from unconscious states remains poorly understood. Here, we took advantage of the rare opportunity to record human intracranial local field potentials from propofol-induced general anesthesia through the transition to behavioral engagement and subsequent full wakefulness, capturing both the stable states of unconsciousness and consciousness and the reconstituting neural dynamics that bridge them. Anesthesia cannot be defined by any single electrophysiological signature; rather, it is an organized low-frequency regime characterized by a constellation of coordinated neural phenomena, including aperiodic slow waves, alpha/beta periodicity, global alpha synchronization, and slow-wave-alpha/beta phase-amplitude coupling. Following anesthetic cessation, this regime progressively dissolved as neural excitability and dynamical complexity climbed. The appearance of conscious behavior coincided with a fast and dramatic transformation in high-gamma activity, from stochastic and unpredictable bursts to structured responses that were distributed, task-selective, and event-locked. These findings suggest that the recovery of consciousness is a multiscale reorganization in which distinct neural underpinnings rise and fall. Together, this work charts an electrophysiological map of how conscious cognition is extinguished, reconfigured, and restored in the human brain.

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