Department of Neurology, BG University Hospital Bergmannsheil, Ruhr-University Bochum, 44789 Bochum, Germany
Collaborative Research Centre 874 "Integration and Representation of Sensory Processes", Ruhr University Bochum, 44780 Bochum, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2020 May 6;40(19):3827-3837. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2904-19.2020. Epub 2020 Apr 8.
Awareness for surprising sensory events is shaped by prior belief inferred from past experience. Here, we combined hierarchical Bayesian modeling with fMRI on an associative learning task in 28 male human participants to characterize the effect of the prior belief of tactile events on connections mediating the outcome of perceptual decisions. Activity in anterior insular cortex (AIC), premotor cortex (PMd), and inferior parietal lobule (IPL) were modulated by prior belief on unexpected targets compared with expected targets. On expected targets, prior belief decreased the connection strength from AIC to IPL, whereas it increased the connection strength from AIC to PMd when targets were unexpected. Individual differences in the modulatory strength of prior belief on insular projections correlated with the precision that increases the influence of prediction errors on belief updating. These results suggest complementary effects of prior belief on insular-frontoparietal projections mediating the precision of prediction during probabilistic tactile learning. In a probabilistic environment, the prior belief of sensory events can be inferred from past experiences. How this prior belief modulates effective brain connectivity for updating expectations for future decision-making remains unexplored. Combining hierarchical Bayesian modeling with fMRI, we show that during tactile associative learning, prior expectations modulate connections originating in the anterior insula cortex and targeting salience-related and attention-related frontoparietal areas (i.e., parietal and premotor cortex). These connections seem to be involved in updating evidence based on the precision of ascending inputs to guide future decision-making.
对令人惊讶的感官事件的意识是由过去经验推断出的先验信念所塑造的。在这里,我们结合了分层贝叶斯建模和 fMRI,对 28 名男性人类参与者进行了联想学习任务,以描述触觉事件的先验信念对介导感知决策结果的连接的影响。与预期目标相比,前岛叶皮层(AIC)、运动前皮层(PMd)和下顶叶皮层(IPL)的活动在前庭感觉目标的先验信念中受到调节。在预期的目标中,先验信念降低了 AIC 到 IPL 的连接强度,而当目标出乎意料时,先验信念增加了 AIC 到 PMd 的连接强度。先验信念对岛叶投射的调节强度的个体差异与预测误差对信念更新的影响增加的精度相关。这些结果表明,在先验信念对介导概率性触觉学习期间预测精度的岛叶-额顶叶投射的影响中存在互补效应。在概率环境中,可以从过去的经验中推断出对感官事件的先验信念。这种先验信念如何调节用于更新对未来决策的期望的有效大脑连接仍然未知。结合分层贝叶斯建模和 fMRI,我们表明在触觉联想学习期间,先验期望调节源自前岛叶皮层并针对显着性和注意力相关的额顶叶区域(即顶叶和运动前皮层)的连接。这些连接似乎参与基于上行输入的精度更新,以指导未来的决策。