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1.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Mar 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38496610

RESUMEN

The human brain receives a continuous stream of input, but it faces significant constraints in its ability to process every item in a sequence of stimuli. Voluntary temporal attention can alleviate these constraints by using information about upcoming stimulus timing to selectively prioritize a task-relevant item over others in a sequence. But the neural mechanisms underlying this ability remain unclear. Here, we manipulated temporal attention to successive stimuli in a two-target temporal cueing task, while controlling for temporal expectation by using fully predictable stimulus timing. We recorded magnetoencephalography (MEG) in human observers and measured the effects of temporal attention on orientation representations of each stimulus using time-resolved multivariate decoding in both sensor and source space. Voluntary temporal attention enhanced the orientation representation of the first target 235-300 milliseconds after target onset. Unlike previous studies that did not isolate temporal attention from temporal expectation, we found no evidence that temporal attention enhanced early visual evoked responses. Instead, and unexpectedly, the primary source of enhanced decoding for attended stimuli in the critical time window was a contiguous region spanning left frontal cortex and cingulate cortex. The results suggest that voluntary temporal attention recruits cortical regions beyond the ventral stream at an intermediate processing stage to amplify the representation of a target stimulus, which may serve to protect it from subsequent interference by a temporal competitor.

2.
Front Psychiatry ; 14: 1199690, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37900297

RESUMEN

Introduction: The strength of certain visual illusions, including contrast-contrast and apparent motion, is weakened in individuals with schizophrenia. Such phenomena have been interpreted as the impaired integration of inhibitory and excitatory neural responses, and impaired top-down feedback mechanisms. Methods: To investigate whether and how these factors influence the perceived contrast-contrast and apparent motion illusions in individuals with schizophrenia, we propose a two-layer network, with top-down feedback from layer 2 to layer 1 that can model visual receptive fields (RFs) and their inhibitory and excitatory subfields. Results: Our neural model suggests that illusion perception changes in individuals with schizophrenia can be influenced by altered top-down mechanisms and the organization of the on-center off-surround receptive fields. Alteration of the RF inhibitory surround and/or the excitatory center can replicate the difference of illusion precepts between individuals with schizophrenia within certain clinical states and normal controls. The results show that the simulated top-down feedback modulation enlarges the difference of the model illusion representations, replicating the difference between the two groups. Discussion: We propose that the heterogeneity of visual and in general sensory processing in certain clinical states of schizophrenia can be largely explained by the degree of top-down feedback reduction, emphasizing the critical role of top-down feedback in illusion perception, and to a lesser extent on the imbalance of excitation/inhibition. Our neural model provides a mechanistic explanation for the modulated visual percepts of contrast-contrast and apparent motion in schizophrenia with findings that can explain a broad range of visual perceptual observations in previous studies. The two-layer motif of the current model provides a general framework that can be tailored to investigate subcortico-cortical (such as thalamocortical) and cortico-cortical networks, bridging neurobiological changes in schizophrenia and perceptual processing.

3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Apr 28.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37162902

RESUMEN

The strength of certain visual illusions is weakened in individuals with schizophrenia. Such phenomena have been interpreted as the impaired integration of inhibitory and excitatory neural responses, and impaired top-down feedback mechanisms. To investigate whether and how these factors influence the perceived illusions in individuals with schizophrenia, we propose a two-layer network that can model visual receptive fields (RFs), their inhibitory and excitatory subfields, and the top-down feedback. Our neural model suggests that illusion perception changes in individuals with schizophrenia can be influenced by altered top-down mechanisms and the organization of the on-center off-surround receptive fields. Alteration of the RF inhibitory surround and/or the excitatory center can replicate the difference of illusion precepts between individuals with schizophrenia and normal controls. The results show that the simulated top-down feedback modulation enlarges the difference of the model illusion representations, replicating the difference between the two groups. We propose that the heterogeneity of visual and in general sensory processing in schizophrenia can be largely explained by the degree of top-down feedback reduction, emphasizing the critical role of top-down feedback in illusion perception, and to a lesser extent on the imbalance of excitation/inhibition. Our neural model provides a mechanistic explanation for the modulated visual percepts in schizophrenia with findings that can explain a broad range of visual perceptual observations in previous studies. The two-layer motif of the current model provides a general framework that can be tailored to investigate subcortico-cortical (such as thalamocortical) and cortico-cortical networks, bridging neurobiological changes in schizophrenia and perceptual processing.

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