Vanderbilt University.
Vanderbilt University Medical Center.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2018 Jun;30(6):814-828. doi: 10.1162/jocn_a_01247. Epub 2018 Feb 28.
The neural underpinnings of perceptual awareness have been extensively studied using unisensory (e.g., visual alone) stimuli. However, perception is generally multisensory, and it is unclear whether the neural architecture uncovered in these studies directly translates to the multisensory domain. Here, we use EEG to examine brain responses associated with the processing of visual, auditory, and audiovisual stimuli presented near threshold levels of detectability, with the aim of deciphering similarities and differences in the neural signals indexing the transition into perceptual awareness across vision, audition, and combined visual-auditory (multisensory) processing. More specifically, we examine (1) the presence of late evoked potentials (∼>300 msec), (2) the across-trial reproducibility, and (3) the evoked complexity associated with perceived versus nonperceived stimuli. Results reveal that, although perceived stimuli are associated with the presence of late evoked potentials across each of the examined sensory modalities, between-trial variability and EEG complexity differed for unisensory versus multisensory conditions. Whereas across-trial variability and complexity differed for perceived versus nonperceived stimuli in the visual and auditory conditions, this was not the case for the multisensory condition. Taken together, these results suggest that there are fundamental differences in the neural correlates of perceptual awareness for unisensory versus multisensory stimuli. Specifically, the work argues that the presence of late evoked potentials, as opposed to neural reproducibility or complexity, most closely tracks perceptual awareness regardless of the nature of the sensory stimulus. In addition, the current findings suggest a greater similarity between the neural correlates of perceptual awareness of unisensory (visual and auditory) stimuli when compared with multisensory stimuli.
知觉意识的神经基础已经通过使用单一感觉(例如,仅视觉)刺激进行了广泛研究。然而,感知通常是多感觉的,并且不清楚这些研究中揭示的神经结构是否直接转化为多感觉领域。在这里,我们使用 EEG 检查与接近可检测性水平的视觉、听觉和视听刺激处理相关的大脑反应,目的是破译在视觉、听觉和组合视觉-听觉(多感觉)处理中索引进入知觉意识的神经信号的相似性和差异性。更具体地说,我们检查了 (1) 晚期诱发电位(∼>300 毫秒)的存在,(2) 跨试验可重复性,以及 (3) 与感知与非感知刺激相关的诱发复杂性。结果表明,尽管在每个检查的感觉模态中,感知到的刺激与晚期诱发电位的存在有关,但单感觉与多感觉条件之间的跨试验可变性和 EEG 复杂性不同。尽管在视觉和听觉条件下,跨试验可变性和复杂性因感知与非感知刺激而异,但在多感觉条件下并非如此。总之,这些结果表明,在单一感觉与多感觉刺激的知觉意识的神经相关性方面存在根本差异。具体来说,这项工作认为,晚期诱发电位的存在,而不是神经可重复性或复杂性,最密切地跟踪知觉意识,无论感觉刺激的性质如何。此外,当前的研究结果表明,与多感觉刺激相比,单一感觉(视觉和听觉)刺激的知觉意识的神经相关性更相似。