基于时间持续时间的视觉统计学习的神经表征。

Imaging neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.) Pub Date : 2025-09-03 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1162/IMAG.a.135
Sachio Otsuka, Jun Saiki
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引用次数: 0

摘要

时间感知是日常生活的一个重要方面,过渡概率可以根据独立于单个对象的时间持续时间来学习。以往关于时空视觉统计学习(VSL)的研究表明,海马和枕侧皮质参与视觉规律的学习。然而,目前尚不清楚的是,与物体识别无关的时间持续时间的VSL是在参与VSL和物体识别的大脑区域中表现出来的,还是在没有感觉皮层参与的时间感知区域中表现出来的。我们通过使用功能磁共振成像使VSL范式适应时间感知来研究这个问题。34名学生参加了VSL实验,包括熟悉性扫描和随后的熟悉性决策测试。基于兴趣区域(ROI)的分类在所有ROI上都表现出机会水平的表现,但只有参与亚秒时间感知的左侧内侧额回表现出中等的效应大小,95%的置信区间没有超过50%的机会水平。此外,探照灯分析显示,右眼窝额叶皮层成功解码了与结构化时序处理相关的大脑反应。同时,表征相似性分析表明,枕骨外侧皮层的神经信号模式无法区分结构化时序序列和伪随机序列。我们的研究结果是一项初步研究,表明内侧额叶和眶额叶区域参与了基于时间持续时间的VSL,独立于视觉对象处理,这是预测连续事件的关键和常见的时间机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Neural representations of visual statistical learning based on temporal duration.

Neural representations of visual statistical learning based on temporal duration.

Neural representations of visual statistical learning based on temporal duration.

Neural representations of visual statistical learning based on temporal duration.

Time perception is an essential aspect of daily life, and transitional probabilities can be learned based on temporal durations that are independent of individual objects. Previous studies on temporal and spatial visual statistical learning (VSL) have shown that the hippocampus and lateral occipital cortex are engaged in learning visual regularities. However, it remains unclear whether VSL on temporal duration unlinked to object identity is represented in brain regions involved in VSL and object recognition or in those involved in time perception without sensory cortex involvement. We examined this question by adapting a VSL paradigm to time perception using functional magnetic resonance imaging. Thirty-four students participated in the VSL experiment, comprising a familiarization scan and a subsequent familiarity-decision test. The region-of-interest (ROI)-based classification showed chance-level performance across all ROIs, but only the left medial frontal gyrus, which is involved in subsecond time perception, showed a moderate effect size with 95% confidence intervals not crossing the chance level of 50%. Moreover, searchlight analysis showed that the right orbitofrontal cortex successfully decoded brain responses related to the processing of structured timing sequences. Meanwhile, representational similarity analysis suggested that the neural signal patterns could not be divided between the structured timing and pseudo-random sequences in the lateral occipital cortex. Our findings serve as a pilot study suggesting that the medial frontal and orbitofrontal regions are involved in VSL based on temporal duration, independent of visual object processing, which is a key and common timing mechanism for predicting sequential events.

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