In patients with idiopathic generalized epilepsies (IGE), bursts of generalized spike and wave discharges (GSWD) lasting ≥2 seconds are considered absence seizures. The location of the absence seizures generators in IGEs is thought to involve interplay between various components of thalamo-cortical circuits; we have recently postulated that medication resistance may, in part, be related to the location of the GSWD generators (1). In the present study we hypothesized that patients with medication-refractory IGE (R-IGE) and continued absence seizures may have location of the GSWD generators other than the thalamus, as typically seen in the IGE patients. Hence, the objective of this study was to determine the location of the GSWD generators in patients with R-IGE using EEG/fMRI. 83 patients with IGE received concurrent EEG/fMRI at 4T. Nine of them (ages 15-55) experienced absence seizures during EEG/fMRI and were included; all were diagnosed with R-IGE. Subjects participated in up to three 20-minute EEG/fMRI sessions (400 volumes; TR = 3 seconds) performed at 4T. After removing fMRI and ballistocardiographic artifacts, 36 absence seizures were identified. Statistical parametric maps were generated for each of these sessions correlating seizures to BOLD response. Timing differences between brain regions were tested using statistical parametric maps generated by modeling seizures with onset times shifted relative to the GSWD onsets. While thalamic BOLD responses peaked at approximately 6 seconds after the onset of absence seizures, other areas including the prefrontal and dorsolateral cortices showed brief and non-sustained peaks occurring ~2 seconds prior to the maximum of the thalamic peak. Temporal lobe peaks occurred at the same time as the thalamic peak with a cerebellar peak occurring ~1 second later. Confirmatory analysis averaging cross