Henry Molly J, Herrmann Björn, Obleser Jonas
Max Planck Research Group "Auditory Cognition," Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
Max Planck Research Group "Auditory Cognition," Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, 04103 Leipzig, Germany.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014 Oct 14;111(41):14935-40. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1408741111. Epub 2014 Sep 29.
Our sensory environment is teeming with complex rhythmic structure, to which neural oscillations can become synchronized. Neural synchronization to environmental rhythms (entrainment) is hypothesized to shape human perception, as rhythmic structure acts to temporally organize cortical excitability. In the current human electroencephalography study, we investigated how behavior is influenced by neural oscillatory dynamics when the rhythmic fluctuations in the sensory environment take on a naturalistic degree of complexity. Listeners detected near-threshold gaps in auditory stimuli that were simultaneously modulated in frequency (frequency modulation, 3.1 Hz) and amplitude (amplitude modulation, 5.075 Hz); modulation rates and types were chosen to mimic the complex rhythmic structure of natural speech. Neural oscillations were entrained by both the frequency modulation and amplitude modulation in the stimulation. Critically, listeners' target-detection accuracy depended on the specific phase-phase relationship between entrained neural oscillations in both the 3.1-Hz and 5.075-Hz frequency bands, with the best performance occurring when the respective troughs in both neural oscillations coincided. Neural-phase effects were specific to the frequency bands entrained by the rhythmic stimulation. Moreover, the degree of behavioral comodulation by neural phase in both frequency bands exceeded the degree of behavioral modulation by either frequency band alone. Our results elucidate how fluctuating excitability, within and across multiple entrained frequency bands, shapes the effective neural processing of environmental stimuli. More generally, the frequency-specific nature of behavioral comodulation effects suggests that environmental rhythms act to reduce the complexity of high-dimensional neural states.
我们的感官环境充满了复杂的节奏结构,神经振荡可以与之同步。神经与环境节奏的同步(夹带)被认为会塑造人类的感知,因为节奏结构会在时间上组织皮层兴奋性。在当前的人类脑电图研究中,我们研究了当感官环境中的节奏波动具有自然主义的复杂程度时,行为是如何受到神经振荡动力学影响的。听众检测到听觉刺激中接近阈值的间隙,这些刺激在频率(频率调制,3.1赫兹)和幅度(幅度调制,5.075赫兹)上同时受到调制;调制率和类型的选择是为了模拟自然语音的复杂节奏结构。刺激中的频率调制和幅度调制都使神经振荡产生了夹带。至关重要的是,听众的目标检测准确性取决于3.1赫兹和5.075赫兹频段中夹带的神经振荡之间特定的相位-相位关系,当两个神经振荡各自的波谷重合时,表现最佳。神经相位效应特定于由节奏刺激夹带的频段。此外,两个频段中神经相位对行为的共调制程度超过了任何一个频段单独对行为的调制程度。我们的结果阐明了在多个夹带频段内和频段之间波动的兴奋性如何塑造对环境刺激的有效神经处理。更一般地说,行为共调制效应的频率特异性表明,环境节奏起到了降低高维神经状态复杂性的作用。