Neuropsychology and Neurorehabilitation Service, Department of Clinical Neurosciences, Vaudois University Hospital Center and University of Lausanne, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland.
J Neurosci. 2011 Dec 7;31(49):17971-81. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3715-11.2011.
Behavioral and brain responses to identical stimuli can vary with experimental and task parameters, including the context of stimulus presentation or attention. More surprisingly, computational models suggest that noise-related random fluctuations in brain responses to stimuli would alone be sufficient to engender perceptual differences between physically identical stimuli. In two experiments combining psychophysics and EEG in healthy humans, we investigated brain mechanisms whereby identical stimuli are (erroneously) perceived as different (higher vs lower in pitch or longer vs shorter in duration) in the absence of any change in the experimental context. Even though, as expected, participants' percepts to identical stimuli varied randomly, a classification algorithm based on a mixture of Gaussians model (GMM) showed that there was sufficient information in single-trial EEG to reliably predict participants' judgments of the stimulus dimension. By contrasting electrical neuroimaging analyses of auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) to the identical stimuli as a function of participants' percepts, we identified the precise timing and neural correlates (strength vs topographic modulations) as well as intracranial sources of these erroneous perceptions. In both experiments, AEP differences first occurred ~100 ms after stimulus onset and were the result of topographic modulations following from changes in the configuration of active brain networks. Source estimations localized the origin of variations in perceived pitch of identical stimuli within right temporal and left frontal areas and of variations in perceived duration within right temporoparietal areas. We discuss our results in terms of providing neurophysiologic evidence for the contribution of random fluctuations in brain activity to conscious perception.
行为和大脑对相同刺激的反应可以随实验和任务参数而变化,包括刺激呈现或注意力的背景。更令人惊讶的是,计算模型表明,大脑对刺激的反应中的与噪声相关的随机波动本身足以在物理上相同的刺激之间产生知觉差异。在两项结合了健康人类心理物理学和 EEG 的实验中,我们研究了大脑机制,通过这些机制,相同的刺激在实验背景没有任何变化的情况下(错误地)被感知为不同(音高更高或更低,持续时间更长或更短)。尽管正如预期的那样,参与者对相同刺激的感知是随机变化的,但基于混合高斯模型(GMM)的分类算法表明,在单次试验 EEG 中有足够的信息可以可靠地预测参与者对刺激维度的判断。通过对比听觉诱发电位(AEPs)的电神经影像学分析与参与者感知的相同刺激,我们确定了这些错误感知的精确时间和神经相关性(强度与拓扑调制)以及颅内来源。在两项实验中,AEP 差异首先在刺激开始后约 100 毫秒出现,是由于主动脑网络的配置变化导致的拓扑调制的结果。源估计将相同刺激的感知音高变化的起源定位于右侧颞区和左侧额区,感知持续时间变化的起源定位于右侧颞顶区。我们根据大脑活动中的随机波动对意识知觉的贡献提供神经生理学证据来讨论我们的结果。