| Literature DB >> 26864304 |
Julia Natascha Frey1,2, Philipp Ruhnau1,2, Sabine Leske3, Markus Siegel4, Christoph Braun1,4, Nathan Weisz1,2.
Abstract
We recently proposed that besides levels of local cortical excitability, also distinct pre-stimulus network states (windows to consciousness) determine whether a near-threshold stimulus will be consciously perceived. In the present magnetoencephalography study, we scrutinised these pre-stimulus network states with a focus on the primary somatosensory cortex. For this purpose participants performed a simple near-threshold tactile detection task. Confirming previous studies, we found reduced alpha and beta power in the somatosensory region contralateral to stimulation prior to correct stimulus detection as compared to undetected stimuli, and stronger event-related responses following successful stimulus detection. As expected, using graph theoretical measures, we also observed modulated pre-stimulus network level integration. Specifically, the right primary somatosensory cortex contralateral to stimulation showed an increased integration in the theta band, and additionally, a decreased integration in the beta band. Overall, these results underline the importance of network states for enabling conscious perception. Moreover, they indicate that also a reduction of irrelevant functional connections contributes to the window to consciousness by tuning pre-stimulus pathways of information flow.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26864304 PMCID: PMC4749972 DOI: 10.1038/srep20805
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Design and event-related responses.
(A) After a variable inter-trial interval between 2–5 s during which participants fixated a central cross, a tactile stimulus was presented on the tip of their left index finger for 50 ms at individual perceptual intensity. After 250 ms, stimulus presentation was followed by an on-screen question, and participants indicated their perception by pressing one of two buttons (‘detected’ or ‘undetected’). (B) Sensor-level event-related global field power in the detected (orange) and undetected (blue) condition for the gradiometer data. Marked with grey lines: First peak at 63 ms, second peak at 133 ms. (C) Source reconstruction of the two main sensor-level peaks marked in B at 63 ms (top) and 133 ms (bottom) for the contrast detected vs. undetected trials, masked at pcluster < 0.05.
Figure 2Pre-stimulus source-level power and functional connectivity.
(A) Source reconstruction of the alpha (lower panel) and beta (upper panel) power effect (pcluster < 0.05). Marked with a black circle is the voxel in SI with the maximal power effect in both frequency bands. (B) The time-frequency representation of the voxel with the maximal power effects marked with a black circle in A. Marked with black rectangles are the time-frequency windows that were used for the source-level power analysis (alpha: 8–14 Hz; beta: 16–26 Hz). (C) Local efficiency effect in the beta band (top; 16-26Hz) and in the theta band (bottom; 2-6Hz). For illustration purpose, the whole brain map is shown at puncorrected < 0.05.