Wiener Martin, Thompson James C
Department of Psychology, George Mason University, USA.
Department of Psychology, George Mason University, USA.
Neuroimage. 2015 Jun;113:268-78. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.03.054. Epub 2015 Mar 25.
A remarkable aspect of conscious perception is that moments carryover from one to the next, also known as temporal continuity. This ability is thus crucial for detecting regularities, such as in speech and music, and may rely on an accurate perception of time. Investigations of human time perception have detailed two electroencephalographic (EEG) components associated with timing, the contingent negative variation (CNV) and late positive component of timing (LPCt); however, the precise roles of these components in timing remain elusive. Recently, we demonstrated that the perception of duration is influenced by durations presented on prior trials, which we explained by the creation of an implicit memory standard that adapts to local changes in sequence presentation. Here, we turn to the neural basis of this effect. Human participants performed a temporal bisection task in which they were required to classify the duration of auditory stimuli into short and long duration categories; crucially, the presentation order was first-order counterbalanced, allowing us to measure the effect of each presented duration on the next. EEG recordings revealed that the CNV and LPCt signals both covaried with the duration presented on the current trial, with CNV predicting reaction time and LPCt predicting choice. Additionally, both signals covaried with the duration presented in the prior trial but in different ways, with the CNV amplitude reflecting the change in the memory standard and the LPCt reflecting decision uncertainty. Furthermore, we observed a repetition enhancement effect of duration only for the CNV, suggesting that this signal additionally indexes the similarity of successive durations. These findings demonstrate dissociable roles for the CNV and LPCt, and demonstrate that both signals are continuously updated on a trial-by-trial basis that reflects shifts in temporal decisions.
意识感知的一个显著方面是时刻之间的延续,也称为时间连续性。因此,这种能力对于检测规律性(如语音和音乐中的规律性)至关重要,并且可能依赖于对时间的准确感知。对人类时间感知的研究详细描述了与计时相关的两个脑电图(EEG)成分,即伴随负变化(CNV)和计时晚期正成分(LPCt);然而,这些成分在计时中的精确作用仍然难以捉摸。最近,我们证明了持续时间的感知会受到先前试验中呈现的持续时间的影响,我们将其解释为通过创建一个适应序列呈现局部变化的内隐记忆标准。在这里,我们转向这种效应的神经基础。人类参与者执行了一项时间二等分任务,在该任务中,他们被要求将听觉刺激的持续时间分类为短持续时间类别和长持续时间类别;至关重要的是,呈现顺序是一阶平衡的,这使我们能够测量每个呈现的持续时间对下一个持续时间的影响。脑电图记录显示,CNV和LPCt信号都与当前试验中呈现的持续时间共变,CNV预测反应时间,LPCt预测选择。此外,这两个信号都与先前试验中呈现的持续时间共变,但方式不同,CNV幅度反映记忆标准的变化,LPCt反映决策不确定性。此外,我们仅在CNV中观察到持续时间的重复增强效应,这表明该信号还额外索引了连续持续时间的相似性。这些发现证明了CNV和LPCt的可分离作用,并表明这两个信号在逐次试验的基础上不断更新,反映了时间决策的变化。