Forschack Norman, Nierhaus Till, Müller Matthias M, Villringer Arno
Max Planck Institute for Human Cognitive and Brain Sciences, 04103 Leipzig, Germany,
Department of Psychology, University of Leipzig, 04109 Leipzig, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2017 Jul 19;37(29):6983-6994. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2582-16.2017. Epub 2017 Jun 19.
Attention filters and weights sensory information according to behavioral demands. Stimulus-related neural responses are increased for the attended stimulus. Does alpha-band activity mediate this effect and is it restricted to conscious sensory events (suprathreshold), or does it also extend to unconscious stimuli (subthreshold)? To address these questions, we recorded EEG in healthy male and female volunteers undergoing subthreshold and suprathreshold somatosensory electrical stimulation to the left or right index finger. The task was to detect stimulation at the randomly alternated cued index finger. Under attention, amplitudes of somatosensory evoked potentials increased 50-60 ms after stimulation (P1) for both suprathreshold and subthreshold events. Prestimulus amplitude of peri-Rolandic alpha, that is mu, showed an inverse relationship to P1 amplitude during attention compared to when the finger was unattended. Interestingly, intermediate and high amplitudes of mu rhythm were associated with the highest P1 amplitudes during attention and smallest P1 during lack of attention, that is, these levels of alpha rhythm seemed to optimally support the behavioral goal ("detect" stimuli at the cued finger while ignoring the other finger). Our results show that attention enhances neural processing for both suprathreshold and subthreshold stimuli and they highlight a rather complex interaction between attention, Rolandic alpha activity, and their effects on stimulus processing. Attention is crucial in prioritizing processing of relevant perceptible (suprathreshold) stimuli: it filters and weights sensory input. The present study investigates the controversially discussed question whether this attention effect extends to imperceptible (subthreshold) stimuli as well. We found noninvasive EEG signatures for attentional modulation of neural events following perceptible and imperceptible somatosensory stimulation in human participants. Specifically, stimulus processing for both kinds of stimulation, subthreshold and suprathreshold, is enhanced by attention. Interestingly, Rolandic alpha rhythm strength and its influence on stimulus processing are strikingly altered by attention most likely to optimally achieve the behavioral goal.
注意力根据行为需求对感觉信息进行筛选和加权。对于被关注的刺激,与刺激相关的神经反应会增强。α波段活动是否介导了这种效应,它是否仅限于有意识的感觉事件(阈上),还是也扩展到无意识刺激(阈下)?为了解决这些问题,我们对健康的男性和女性志愿者进行了脑电图记录,他们的左手或右手食指接受阈下和阈上体感电刺激。任务是检测随机交替提示的食指上的刺激。在注意力集中的情况下,对于阈上和阈下事件,体感诱发电位的振幅在刺激后50 - 60毫秒(P1)增加。与手指未被关注时相比,在注意力集中时,罗兰区周围α波(即μ波)的刺激前振幅与P1振幅呈反比关系。有趣的是,在注意力集中时,μ节律的中等和高振幅与最高的P1振幅相关,而在注意力不集中时与最小的P1振幅相关,也就是说,这些α节律水平似乎最有利于实现行为目标(“检测”提示手指上的刺激,同时忽略另一只手指)。我们的结果表明,注意力增强了对阈上和阈下刺激的神经处理,并且突出了注意力、罗兰区α活动及其对刺激处理的影响之间相当复杂的相互作用。注意力对于优先处理相关的可感知(阈上)刺激至关重要:它对感觉输入进行筛选和加权。本研究调查了一个有争议的问题,即这种注意力效应是否也扩展到不可感知的(阈下)刺激。我们在人类参与者中发现了非侵入性脑电图特征,用于对可感知和不可感知体感刺激后的神经事件进行注意力调制。具体而言,注意力增强了对阈下和阈上这两种刺激的处理。有趣的是,罗兰区α节律强度及其对刺激处理的影响很可能因注意力而显著改变,以最优化地实现行为目标。