重复呈现一种刺激对猕猴皮层对其他刺激反应的促进作用——错配消极性的可能神经机制

Kana Takaura, N. Fujii
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引用次数: 17

摘要

事件相关的潜在“失配负性”(MMN)是感知者检测感觉信号流偏差能力的指标。MMN及其在动物中的同系物,失配活动(MMA),是对反复出现的刺激和随后的异常刺激(古怪)的不同神经反应。由于MMN和MMA的神经机制尚不清楚,因此关于MMN和MMA是否仅由刺激特异性适应(SSA)引起存在争议,在SSA中,对刺激的反应随着刺激的重复出现而逐渐减弱。为了解决这个问题,我们在两只清醒的猕猴身上使用了皮质电图和听觉漫游-古怪的范式。我们在时频域研究了刺激重复次数对MMA的影响,以及对重复刺激和古怪事物的大脑皮层反应。随着重复次数的增加,MMA分布在颞叶、额叶和顶叶皮层,每个电极产生更大的MMA。令人惊讶的是,MMA的增加很大程度上取决于对古怪刺激的反应增强,而不是对重复刺激的SSA。在足够的重复之后,古怪的刺激在额叶皮层的一些电极上引起了频谱功率的增加,而在之前的重复较少或没有重复的刺激下,这些电极没有显示出功率的增加。我们由此发现,重复呈现一种刺激不仅会导致SSA,而且还会促进皮层对涉及广泛皮层区域的古怪事物的反应。这种促进作用可能是猕猴头皮产生MMN样电位的基础,可能与人类的MMN具有相似的神经机制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Facilitative effect of repetitive presentation of one stimulus on cortical responses to other stimuli in macaque monkeys – a possible neural mechanism for mismatch negativity
The event‐related potential ‘mismatch negativity’ (MMN) is an indicator of a perceiver's ability to detect deviations in sensory signal streams. MMN and its homologue in animals, mismatch activity (MMA), are differential neural responses to a repeatedly presented stimulus and a subsequent deviant stimulus (oddball). Because neural mechanisms underlying MMN and MMA remain unclear, there is a controversy as to whether MMN and MMA arise solely from stimulus‐specific adaptation (SSA), in which the response to a stimulus cumulatively attenuates with its repetitive presentation. To address this issue, we used electrocorticography and the auditory roving‐oddball paradigm in two awake macaque monkeys. We examined the effect of stimulus repetition number on MMA and on responses to repeated stimuli and oddballs across the cerebral cortex in the time–frequency domain. As the repetition number increased, MMA spread across the temporal, frontal and parietal cortices, and each electrode yielded a larger MMA. Surprisingly, this increment in MMA largely depended on response augmentation to the oddball rather than on SSA to the repeated stimulus. Following sufficient repetition, the oddball evoked a spectral power increment in some electrodes on the frontal cortex that had shown no power increase to the stimuli with less or no preceding repetition. We thereby revealed that repetitive presentation of one stimulus not only leads to SSA but also facilitates the cortical response to oddballs involving a wide range of cortical regions. This facilitative effect might underlie the generation of MMN‐like scalp potentials in macaques that potentially shares similar neural mechanisms with MMN in humans.
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