Hautasaari, PekkaSaloranta, HarriSavić, Andrej M.Korniloff, KatariinaKujala, Urho M.Tarkka, Ina M.2024-08-202024-08-202020-12Hautasaari , P , Saloranta , H , Savić , A M , Korniloff , K , Kujala , U M & Tarkka , I M 2020 , ' Bilateral activations in operculo-insular area show temporal dissociation after peripheral electrical stimulation in healthy adults ' , European Journal of Neuroscience , vol. 52 , no. 12 , pp. 4604-4612 . https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.139460953-816Xhttps://hdl.handle.net/11556/4774Publisher Copyright: © 2018 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and John Wiley & Sons LtdInterhemispheric transfer is necessary for sensory integration and coordination of body sides. We studied how somatosensory input from one body side may reach both body sides. First, we investigated with 17 healthy adults in which uni- and bilateral brain areas were involved in consecutive stages of automatic sensory processing of non-nociceptive peripheral stimulation. Somatosensory evoked fields (SEFs) to electrical stimulation were recorded with 306-channel magnetoencephalography in two conditions. First, SEFs were registered following sensory radial nerve (RN) stimulation to dorsal surface of the right hand and second, following median nerve (MN) stimulation at the right wrist. Cortical activations were located in contralateral postcentral gyrus after MN and RN stimulations and in bilateral operculo-insular area after RN stimulation. First component occurred earlier after MN than RN stimulation. Middle latency components had similar latencies with stronger activation in contralateral postcentral gyrus after MN than RN stimulation. Interestingly, long latency components located in bilateral operculo-insular area after RN stimulation showed latency difference between hemispheres, i.e. activation peaked earlier in contralateral than in ipsilateral side. Additional experiments comparing novel intracutaneous nociceptive, RN and MN electrical stimuli confirmed bilateral long latency activation elicited by each stimulus type and highlighted latency differences between hemispheres. Variations in activation of bilateral operculo-insular areas may corroborate their role in pain network and in multisensory integration. Our findings imply that these areas present a relay station in multisensory stimulus detection.9enginfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessBilateral activations in operculo-insular area show temporal dissociation after peripheral electrical stimulation in healthy adultsjournal article10.1111/ejn.13946magnetoencephalographymedian nervenociceptionradial nervesensory cortexGeneral Neurosciencehttp://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85050457964&partnerID=8YFLogxK