Campbell Alana M, Davalos Deana B
Department of Psychiatry and the UNC Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Department of Psychology, Colorado State University , Fort Collins, CO, USA.
Front Psychol. 2015 Oct 27;6:1619. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01619. eCollection 2015.
Time perception has been described as a fundamental skill needed to engage in a number of higher level cognitive processes essential to successfully navigate everyday life (e.g., planning, sequencing, etc.) Temporal processing is often thought of as a basic neural process that impacts a variety of other cognitive processes. Others, however, have argued that timing in the brain can be affected by a number of variables such as attention and motivation. In an effort to better understand timing in the brain at a basic level with minimal attentional demands, researchers have often employed use of the mismatch negativity (MMN). MMN, specifically duration MMN (dMMN) and interval MMN (iMMN) have been popular methods for studying temporal processing in populations for which attention or motivation may be an issue (e.g., clinical populations, early developmental studies). There are, however, select studies which suggest that attention may in fact modify both temporal processing in general and the MMN event-related potential. It is unclear the degree to which attention affects MMN or whether the effects differ depending on the complexity or difficulty of the MMN paradigm. The iMMN indexes temporal processing and is elicited by introducing a deviant interval duration amid a series of standards. A greater degree of difference in the deviant from the standard elicits a heightened iMMN. Unlike past studies, in which attention was intentionally directed toward a closed-captioned move, the current study had participants partake in tasks involving varying degrees of attention (passive, low, and high) with varying degrees of deviants (small, medium, and large) to better understand the role of attention on the iMMN and to assess whether level of attention paired with changes in task difficulty differentially influence the iMMN electrophysiological responses. Data from 19 subjects were recorded in an iMMN paradigm. The amplitude of the iMMN waveform showed an increase with attention, particularly for intervals that were the most distinct from a standard interval (p < 0.02). Results suggest that the role of attention on the iMMN is complex. Both the degree of attention paid as well as the level of difficulty of the MMN task likely influence the neuronal response within a timing network. These results suggest that electrophysiological perception of time is modified by attention and that the design of the iMMN study is critical to minimize the possible confounding effects of attention. In addition, the implications of these results for future studies assessing interval duration-based MMN in clinical populations is also addressed.
时间感知被描述为参与许多对成功应对日常生活至关重要的高级认知过程(如计划、排序等)所需的一项基本技能。时间处理通常被认为是一种影响多种其他认知过程的基本神经过程。然而,也有其他人认为,大脑中的计时会受到诸如注意力和动机等多种变量的影响。为了在注意力需求最小的基本层面上更好地理解大脑中的计时,研究人员经常采用失匹配负波(MMN)。MMN,特别是持续时间MMN(dMMN)和间隔MMN(iMMN),一直是研究那些注意力或动机可能成为问题的人群(如临床人群、早期发育研究)时间处理的常用方法。然而,有一些研究表明,注意力实际上可能会改变一般的时间处理以及MMN事件相关电位。目前尚不清楚注意力在何种程度上影响MMN,或者这些影响是否因MMN范式的复杂性或难度而异。iMMN可索引时间处理,并通过在一系列标准刺激中引入一个异常的间隔持续时间来诱发。异常刺激与标准刺激之间的差异越大,诱发的iMMN就越强。与过去的研究不同,在过去的研究中注意力被有意地指向一个有字幕的视频,而当前的研究让参与者参与涉及不同程度注意力(被动、低和高)以及不同程度异常刺激(小、中、大)的任务,以更好地理解注意力对iMMN的作用,并评估注意力水平与任务难度变化是否会对iMMN的电生理反应产生不同影响。在一个iMMN范式中记录了19名受试者的数据。iMMN波形的幅度随着注意力的增加而增大,特别是对于与标准间隔差异最大的间隔(p < 0.02)。结果表明,注意力对iMMN的作用是复杂的。所投入的注意力程度以及MMN任务的难度水平可能都会影响计时网络中的神经元反应。这些结果表明,时间的电生理感知会受到注意力的影响,并且iMMN研究的设计对于最小化注意力可能产生的混杂效应至关重要。此外,还讨论了这些结果对未来评估临床人群中基于间隔持续时间的MMN研究的意义。