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Network Configurations in the Human Brain Reflect Choice Bias during Rapid Face Processing.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29118108

 

 

 

 2017 Dec 13;37(50):12226-12237. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1677-17.2017. Epub 2017 Nov 8.

Network Configurations in the Human Brain Reflect Choice Bias during Rapid Face Processing.

Tu T1, Schneck N1,2, Muraskin J1, Sajda P3,4,5.

Abstract

Network interactions are likely to be instrumental in processes underlying rapid perception and cognition. Specifically, high-level and perceptual regions must interact to balance pre-existing models of the environment with new incoming stimuli. Simultaneous electroencephalography (EEG) and fMRI (EEG/fMRI) enables temporal characterization of brain-network interactions combined with improved anatomical localization of regional activity. In this paper, we use simultaneous EEG/fMRI and multivariate dynamical systems (MDS) analysis to characterize network relationships between constitute brain areas that reflect a subject's choice for a face versus nonface categorization task. Our simultaneous EEG and fMRI analysis on 21 human subjects (12 males, 9 females) identifies early perceptual and late frontal subsystems that are selective to the categorical choice of faces versus nonfaces. We analyze the interactions between these subsystems using an MDS in the space of the BOLD signal. Our main findings show that differences between face-choice and house-choice networks are seen in the network interactions between the early and late subsystems, and that the magnitude of the difference in network interaction positively correlates with the behavioral false-positive rate of face choices. We interpret this to reflect the role of saliency and expectations likely encoded in frontal "late" regions on perceptual processes occurring in "early" perceptual regions.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Our choices are affected by our biases. In visual perception and cognition such biases can be commonplace and quite curious-e.g., we see a human face when staring up at a cloud formation or down at a piece of toast at the breakfast table. Here we use multimodal neuroimaging and dynamical systems analysis to measure whole-brain spatiotemporal dynamics while subjects make decisions regarding the type of object they see in rapidly flashed images. We find that the degree of interaction in these networks accounts for a substantial fraction of our bias to see faces. In general, our findings illustrate how the properties of spatiotemporal networks yield insight into the mechanisms of how we form decisions.

KEYWORDS:

EEG-fMRI; choice bias; dynamical system; faces; networks

PMID:
 
29118108
 
PMCID:
 
PMC5729192
 [Available on 2018-06-13]
 
DOI:
 
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1677-17.2017

 

 

 

 

0.1초 사진을 보여주고, 뇌에서 반응하는 영역들의 상호작용을 EEG 와 fMRI 로 잡아내어, 사람의 선택이 편향되어 있음을 보여준다.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

201801 Neuroscience J _ Network Configurations in the Human Brain Reflect Choice Bias during Rapid Face Processing.pdf