Institut für Psychologie, Universität Leipzig, Neumarkt 9-19, 04109, Leipzig, Germany; Institut für Medizinische Psychologie und Medizinische Soziologie, Universitätsmedizin Göttingen, Georg-August-Universität, 37973, Göttingen, Germany.
Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging, Institute of Neuroscience and Psychology, University of Glasgow, 58 Hillhead Street, G12 8QB, Glasgow, UK.
Neuroimage. 2017 Nov 1;161:32-42. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.08.022. Epub 2017 Aug 9.
The neural processing of a visual stimulus can be facilitated by attending to its position or by a co-occurring auditory tone. Using frequency-tagging, we investigated whether facilitation by spatial attention and audio-visual synchrony rely on similar neural processes. Participants attended to one of two flickering Gabor patches (14.17 and 17 Hz) located in opposite lower visual fields. Gabor patches further "pulsed" (i.e. showed smooth spatial frequency variations) at distinct rates (3.14 and 3.63 Hz). Frequency-modulating an auditory stimulus at the pulse-rate of one of the visual stimuli established audio-visual synchrony. Flicker and pulsed stimulation elicited stimulus-locked rhythmic electrophysiological brain responses that allowed tracking the neural processing of simultaneously presented Gabor patches. These steady-state responses (SSRs) were quantified in the spectral domain to examine visual stimulus processing under conditions of synchronous vs. asynchronous tone presentation and when respective stimulus positions were attended vs. unattended. Strikingly, unique patterns of effects on pulse- and flicker driven SSRs indicated that spatial attention and audiovisual synchrony facilitated early visual processing in parallel and via different cortical processes. We found attention effects to resemble the classical top-down gain effect facilitating both, flicker and pulse-driven SSRs. Audio-visual synchrony, in turn, only amplified synchrony-producing stimulus aspects (i.e. pulse-driven SSRs) possibly highlighting the role of temporally co-occurring sights and sounds in bottom-up multisensory integration.
视觉刺激的神经处理可以通过注意其位置或同时出现的听觉音调来促进。我们使用频率标记来研究空间注意力和视听同步促进是否依赖于类似的神经过程。参与者注意到两个闪烁的 Gabor 补丁(14.17 和 17 Hz)中的一个,它们位于相反的下视野中。Gabor 补丁以不同的速率(3.14 和 3.63 Hz)进一步“脉冲”(即表现出平滑的空间频率变化)。以一个视觉刺激的脉冲率调制听觉刺激可以建立视听同步。闪烁和脉冲刺激引发了与刺激锁相的节律性脑电生理反应,允许跟踪同时呈现的 Gabor 补丁的神经处理。这些稳态反应(SSRs)在频谱域中进行量化,以检查在同步和异步音调呈现以及相应刺激位置被注意和未被注意的情况下,视觉刺激处理的情况。引人注目的是,对脉冲和闪烁驱动 SSR 产生影响的独特模式表明,空间注意力和视听同步以并行和不同的皮质过程促进早期视觉处理。我们发现,注意力效应类似于经典的自上而下的增益效应,促进了闪烁和脉冲驱动 SSR。相反,视听同步仅放大了产生同步的刺激方面(即脉冲驱动 SSR),这可能突出了时间上同时出现的视觉和声音在自下而上的多感官整合中的作用。