Perception Lab, School of Psychology, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
School of Optometry and Vision Science, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Sci Rep. 2024 Jan 8;14(1):836. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-50760-7.
Most people can conjure images and sounds that they experience in their minds. There are, however, marked individual differences. Some people report that they cannot generate imagined sensory experiences at all (aphantasics) and others report that they have unusually intense imagined experiences (hyper-phantasics). These individual differences have been linked to activity in sensory brain regions, driven by feedback. We would therefore expect imagined experiences to be associated with specific frequencies of oscillatory brain activity, as these can be a hallmark of neural interactions within and across regions of the brain. Replicating a number of other studies, relative to a Resting-State we find that the act of engaging in auditory or in visual imagery is linked to reductions in the power of oscillatory brain activity across a broad range of frequencies, with prominent peaks in the alpha band (8-12 Hz). This oscillatory activity, however, did not predict individual differences in the subjective intensity of imagined experiences. For audio imagery, these were rather predicted by reductions within the theta (6-9 Hz) and gamma (33-38 Hz) bands, and by increases in beta (15-17 Hz) band activity. For visual imagery these were predicted by reductions in lower (14-16 Hz) and upper (29-32 Hz) beta band activity, and by an increase in mid-beta band (24-26 Hz) activity. Our data suggest that there is sufficient ground truth in the subjective reports people use to describe the intensity of their imagined sensory experiences to allow these to be linked to the power of distinct rhythms of brain activity. In future, we hope to combine this approach with better measures of the subjective intensity of imagined sensory experiences to provide a clearer picture of individual differences in the subjective intensity of imagined experiences, and of why these eventuate.
大多数人都可以在脑海中想象出自己经历过的图像和声音。然而,个体之间存在明显的差异。有些人报告说他们根本无法产生想象中的感官体验(无想象者),而另一些人则报告说他们有异常强烈的想象体验(超想象者)。这些个体差异与感官大脑区域的反馈活动有关。因此,我们预计想象中的体验会与特定频率的脑活动振荡相关,因为这些可以作为大脑内部和跨区域神经相互作用的标志。在与静息状态相比时,我们复制了许多其他研究,发现参与听觉或视觉想象的行为与大脑活动的广泛频率范围内的振荡活动的功率降低有关,在 alpha 频段(8-12 Hz)有明显的峰值。然而,这种振荡活动并不能预测想象体验主观强度的个体差异。对于听觉想象,这些差异主要是由 theta(6-9 Hz)和 gamma(33-38 Hz)频段内的降低以及 beta(15-17 Hz)频段活动的增加所预测的。对于视觉想象,这些差异是由较低频段(14-16 Hz)和较高频段(29-32 Hz)beta 频段活动的降低以及中 beta 频段(24-26 Hz)活动的增加所预测的。我们的数据表明,人们用来描述想象中感官体验强度的主观报告中有足够的真实信息,可以将其与大脑活动的不同节律的功率联系起来。在未来,我们希望将这种方法与对想象中感官体验的主观强度的更好测量相结合,以更清晰地描绘想象中感官体验的主观强度的个体差异,以及为什么会产生这些差异。