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Chunk #36 — TOP-DOWN PROCESSES - PAC IN VOLUNTARY MOVEMENT

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Alcohol use disorder is associated with increases in frontocentral phase-amplitude coupling strength during resting state.
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Excessive resting state PAC when phase frequency is in the high alpha to beta frequency range (10-25 Hz) and amplitude frequency in low to high gamma (30-200 Hz) has also been reported in Parkinson’s disease (PD) in primary motor cortex and adjacent motor regions (de Hemptinne et al., 2013; López-Azcárate et al., 2010; van Wijk et al., 2016; Yin et al., 2022). Pathologically strong beta-gamma PAC seen in unmedicated Parkinson’s disease patients was associated with more severe motor symptoms, both of which were dramatically reduced following levodopa treatment (López-Azcárate et al., 2010; van Wijk et al., 2016). PD patients also exhibited strong beta-gamma PAC in the motor cortex accompanying freezing of gait with gait freezing temporally aligned with increased beta-gamma PAC (Yin et al., 2022). It has been suggested that observed excessive PAC might reflect a pathological restriction of motor cortex to a monotonous pattern of coupling that make it less responsive to signals from brain regions mediating voluntary movement (de Hemptinne et al., 2013). In fact, results from a recent study have provided evidence indicating that temporal PAC dynamics