Pre-stimulus beta power mediates explicit and implicit perceptual biases in distinct cortical areas.

Carina Forster, Tilman Stephani, Martin Grund, Eleni Panagoulas, Esra Al, Simon M Hofmann, Vadim V Nikulin, Arno Villringer
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Abstract

Perception is biased by expectations and previous actions. Pre-stimulus brain oscillations are a potential candidate for implementing biases in the brain. In two EEG studies (43 and 39 participants) on somatosensory near-threshold detection, we investigated the pre-stimulus neural correlates of an (implicit) previous choice bias and an explicit bias. The explicit bias was introduced by informing participants about stimulus probability on a single-trial level (volatile context) or block-wise (stable context). Behavioural analysis confirmed adjustments in the decision criterion and confidence ratings according to the cued probabilities and previous choice-induced biases. Pre-stimulus beta power with distinct sources in sensory and higher-order cortical areas predicted explicit and implicit biases, respectively, on a single subject level and partially mediated the impact of previous choice and stimulus probability on the detection response. We suggest pre-stimulus beta oscillations in distinct brain areas as a neural correlate of explicit and implicit biases in somatosensory perception.

在不同的皮层区域,刺激前的能量介导外显和内隐知觉偏差。
感知会受到预期和先前行为的影响。刺激前的大脑振荡是在大脑中实现偏见的潜在候选者。在两项体感近阈值检测的脑电图研究中(43名和39名参与者),我们研究了(内隐)先前选择偏差和外显偏差的前刺激神经相关性。外显偏差是通过在单次试验水平(不稳定环境)或分组(稳定环境)上告知参与者刺激概率来引入的。行为分析证实了根据提示概率和先前选择引起的偏差对决策标准和信心评级的调整。在单个被试的水平上,感觉区和高阶皮质区不同来源的预刺激功率分别预测外显和内隐偏倚,并部分介导先前选择和刺激概率对检测反应的影响。我们认为刺激前的β振荡在不同的大脑区域作为躯体感觉知觉的显式和内隐偏见的神经关联。
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