Language
English
Publication Date
6-1-2026
Journal
Nature
DOI
10.1038/s41586-026-10448-0
PMID
42092132
PMCID
PMC13275293
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
5-6-2026
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Post-print
Abstract
Consciousness is a fundamental component of cognition1, but the degree to which higher-order pattern recognition relies on it remains disputed2,3. Here we demonstrate the persistence of oddball discrimination, semantic processing and online prediction in individuals under general-anaesthesia-induced loss of consciousness4,5. Using high-density Neuropixels microelectrodes6 to record both single-unit and local-field-potential neural activity in the human hippocampus while playing a series of tones to anaesthetized patients, we found that hippocampal neurons and local oscillations retained some detection of oddball tones. This effect size grew over the course of the experiment (around 10 min), demonstrating representational plasticity. A biologically plausible recurrent neural network model showed that learning and oddball representation are an emergent property of flexible tone discrimination. Moreover, when we played language stimuli, single units and local field potentials carried information about the semantic and grammatical features of natural speech, even predicting semantic information about upcoming words. Together these results indicate that in the hippocampus, which is anatomically and functionally distant from primary sensory cortices7, complex processing of sensory stimuli occurs even in the unconscious state.
Keywords
Humans, Hippocampus, Language, Neuronal Plasticity, Male, Female, Neurons, Adult, Semantics, Consciousness, Unconsciousness, Local Field Potential Measurement, Models, Neurological, Anesthesia, General, Acoustic Stimulation, Young Adult, Discrimination, Psychological, Perception, Language, Hippocampus, Sensory processing, Consciousness
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Katlowitz, Kalman A; Cole, Eric R; Mickiewicz, Elizabeth A; et al., "Plasticity and Language in the Anaesthetized Human Hippocampus" (2026). Faculty, Staff and Students Publications. 7188.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/baylor_docs/7188