Literature DB >> 30242048

Genomic Analyses of Visual Cognition: Perceptual Rivalry and Top-Down Control.

Biqing Chen1,2,3, Zijian Zhu1,2, Ren Na1,2,4,5, Wan Fang1,2,6,7, Wenxia Zhang1,2, Qin Zhou8, Shanbi Zhou9, Han Lei8, Ailong Huang8, Tingmei Chen8, Dongsheng Ni8,10, Yuping Gu8,10, Jianing Liu8,10, Fang Fang11,2,4,5, Yi Rao11,2,6,7.   

Abstract

Visual cognition in humans has traditionally been studied with cognitive behavioral methods and brain imaging, but much less with genetic methods. Perceptual rivalry, an important phenomenon in visual cognition, is the spontaneous perceptual alternation that occurs between two distinct interpretations of a physically constant visual stimulus (e.g., binocular rivalry stimuli) or a perceptually ambiguous stimulus (e.g., the Necker cube). The switching rate varies dramatically across individuals and can be voluntarily modulated by observers. Here, we adopted a genomic approach to systematically investigate the genetics underlying binocular rivalry, Necker cube rivalry and voluntary modulation of Necker cube rivalry in young Chinese adults (Homo sapiens, 81% female, 20 ± 1 years old) at multiple levels, including common single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP)-based heritability estimation, SNP-based genome-wide association study (GWAS), gene-based analysis, and pathway analysis. We performed a pilot GWAS in 2441 individuals and replicated it in an independent cohort of 943 individuals. Common SNP-based heritability was estimated to be 25% for spontaneous perceptual rivalry. SNPs rs184765639 and rs75595941 were associated with voluntary modulation, and imaging data suggested genotypic difference of rs184765639 in the surface area of the left caudal-middle frontal cortex. Additionally, converging evidence from multilevel analyses associated genes such as PRMT1 with perceptual switching rate, and MIR1178 with voluntary modulation strength. In summary, this study discovered specific genetic contributions to perceptual rivalry and its voluntary modulation in human beings. These findings may promote our understanding of psychiatric disorders, as perceptual rivalry is a potential psychiatric biomarker.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Perceptual rivalry is an important visual phenomenon in which our perception of a physically constant visual input spontaneously switches between two different states. There are individual variations in perceptual switching rate and voluntary modulation strength. Our genomic analyses reveal several loci associated with these two kinds of variation. Because perceptual rivalry is thought to be relevant to and potentially an endophenotype for psychiatric disorders, these results may help understand not only visual cognition, but also psychiatric disorders.
Copyright © 2018 the authors 0270-6474/18/389669-11$15.00/0.

Entities:  

Keywords:  GWAS; heritability; perceptual rivalry; structural MRI; voluntary modulation

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30242048      PMCID: PMC6595983          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1970-17.2018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  93 in total

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  2 in total

1.  Heritability of human visual contour integration-an integrated genomic study.

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2.  A genome-wide association study reveals a substantial genetic basis underlying the Ebbinghaus illusion.

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