Calvert G A, Hansen P C, Iversen S D, Brammer M J
Oxford Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging of the Brain (FMRIB), Oxford, OX3 1DU, UK.
Neuroimage. 2001 Aug;14(2):427-38. doi: 10.1006/nimg.2001.0812.
Electrophysiological studies in nonhuman primates and other mammals have shown that sensory cues from different modalities that appear at the same time and in the same location can increase the firing rate of multisensory cells in the superior colliculus to a level exceeding that predicted by summing the responses to the unimodal inputs. In contrast, spatially disparate multisensory cues can induce a profound response depression. We have previously demonstrated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) that similar indices of crossmodal facilitation and inhibition are detectable in human cortex when subjects listen to speech while viewing visually congruent and incongruent lip and mouth movements. Here, we have used fMRI to investigate whether similar BOLD signal changes are observable during the crossmodal integration of nonspeech auditory and visual stimuli, matched or mismatched solely on the basis of their temporal synchrony, and if so, whether these crossmodal effects occur in similar brain areas as those identified during the integration of audio-visual speech. Subjects were exposed to synchronous and asynchronous auditory (white noise bursts) and visual (B/W alternating checkerboard) stimuli and to each modality in isolation. Synchronous and asynchronous bimodal inputs produced superadditive BOLD response enhancement and response depression across a large network of polysensory areas. The most highly significant of these crossmodal gains and decrements were observed in the superior colliculi. Other regions exhibiting these crossmodal interactions included cortex within the superior temporal sulcus, intraparietal sulcus, insula, and several foci in the frontal lobe, including within the superior and ventromedial frontal gyri. These data demonstrate the efficacy of using an analytic approach informed by electrophysiology to identify multisensory integration sites in humans and suggest that the particular network of brain areas implicated in these crossmodal integrative processes are dependent on the nature of the correspondence between the different sensory inputs (e.g. space, time, and/or form).
对非人类灵长类动物和其他哺乳动物的电生理研究表明,同时出现在同一位置的来自不同感觉模态的感觉线索,可将上丘中多感觉细胞的放电率提高到超过对单模态输入反应总和所预测的水平。相比之下,空间上不同的多感觉线索可诱发深度的反应抑制。我们之前使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)证明,当受试者观看唇和嘴的视觉一致和不一致动作时听语音,在人类皮层中可检测到类似的跨模态促进和抑制指标。在这里,我们使用fMRI来研究在非语音听觉和视觉刺激的跨模态整合过程中,是否能观察到类似的BOLD信号变化,这些刺激仅根据其时间同步性进行匹配或不匹配,如果可以观察到,这些跨模态效应是否发生在与视听语音整合过程中所确定的类似脑区。受试者暴露于同步和异步听觉(白噪声脉冲)和视觉(黑白交替棋盘格)刺激以及单独的每种模态。同步和异步双模态输入在一个大的多感觉区域网络中产生了超相加性的BOLD反应增强和反应抑制。这些跨模态增益和衰减中最显著的在双侧上丘中观察到。表现出这些跨模态相互作用的其他区域包括颞上沟内的皮层、顶内沟、脑岛以及额叶中的几个焦点,包括额上回和额内侧回内的区域。这些数据证明了使用基于电生理学的分析方法来识别人类多感觉整合位点的有效性,并表明参与这些跨模态整合过程的特定脑区网络取决于不同感觉输入之间对应关系的性质(例如空间、时间和/或形式)。