fMRI Repetition Suppression: Neuronal Adaptation or Stimulus Expectation?

被引:197
|
作者
Larsson, Jonas [1 ]
Smith, Andrew T. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ London, Dept Psychol, Egham TW20 0EX, Surrey, England
基金
英国惠康基金;
关键词
attention; cerebral cortex; human; neuroimaging; vision; ORIENTATION-SELECTIVE ADAPTATION; VISUAL-CORTEX; AREA MT; ATTENTIONAL MODULATION; SPATIAL ATTENTION; MIRROR NEURONS; SINGLE CELLS; MOTION; REPRESENTATION; MECHANISMS;
D O I
10.1093/cercor/bhr119
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Measurements of repetition suppression with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI adaptation) have been used widely to probe neuronal population response properties in human cerebral cortex. fMRI adaptation techniques assume that fMRI repetition suppression reflects neuronal adaptation, an assumption that has been challenged on the basis of evidence that repetition-related response changes may reflect unrelated factors, such as attention and stimulus expectation. Specifically, Summerfield et al. (Summerfield C, Trittschuh EH, Monti JM, Mesulam MM, Egner T. 2008. Neural repetition suppression reflects fulfilled perceptual expectations. Nat Neurosci. 11:1004-1006) reported that the relative frequency of stimulus repetitions and non-repetitions influenced the magnitude of repetition suppression in the fusiform face area, suggesting that stimulus expectation accounted for most of the effect of repetition. We confirm that stimulus expectation can significantly influence fMRI repetition suppression throughout visual cortex and show that it occurs with long as well as short adaptation durations. However, the effect was attention dependent: When attention was diverted away from the stimuli, the effects of stimulus expectation completely disappeared. Nonetheless, robust and significant repetition suppression was still evident. These results suggest that fMRI repetition suppression reflects a combination of neuronal adaptation and attention-dependent expectation effects that can be experimentally dissociated. This implies that with an appropriate experimental design, fMRI adaptation can provide valid measures of neuronal adaptation and hence response specificity.
引用
收藏
页码:567 / 576
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Decoupling expectation and adaptation effects in fMRI repetition suppression
    Yellin, D.
    Malach, R.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR NEUROSCIENCE, 2012, 48 : S128 - S128
  • [2] FMRI repetition suppression for voices is modulated by stimulus expectations
    Andics, Attila
    Gal, Viktor
    Vicsi, Klara
    Rudas, Gabor
    Vidnyanszky, Zoltan
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2013, 69 : 277 - 283
  • [3] SUPPRESSION-RECOVERY EFFECT IN RELATION TO STIMULUS REPETITION AND RAPID LIGHT ADAPTATION
    SALINGER, WL
    LINDSLEY, DB
    [J]. VISION RESEARCH, 1972, 12 (11) : 1897 - &
  • [4] Expectation affects neural repetition suppression in infancy
    Emberson, Lauren L.
    Boldin, Alex M.
    Robertson, Claire E.
    Cannon, Grace
    Aslin, Richard N.
    [J]. DEVELOPMENTAL COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2019, 37
  • [5] Repetition Probability Does Not Affect fMRI Repetition Suppression for Objects
    Kovacs, Gyula
    Kaiser, Daniel
    Kaliukhovich, Dzmitry A.
    Vidnyanszky, Zoltan
    Vogels, Rufin
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2013, 33 (23): : 9805 - 9812
  • [6] The suppression of repetition enhancement: A review of fMRI studies
    Segaert, Katrien
    Weber, Kirsten
    de Lange, Floris P.
    Petersson, Karl Magnus
    Hagoort, Peter
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2013, 51 (01) : 59 - 66
  • [7] Expectation modulates repetition priming under high stimulus variability
    Olkkonen, Maria
    Aguirre, Geoffrey K.
    Epstein, Russell A.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF VISION, 2017, 17 (06):
  • [8] The relationship between fMRI adaptation and repetition priming
    Ganel, Tzvi
    Gonzalez, Claudia L. R.
    Valyear, Kenneth F.
    Culham, Jody C.
    Goodale, Melvyn A.
    Kohler, Stefan
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2006, 32 (03) : 1432 - 1440
  • [9] Stimulus repetition probability effects on repetition suppression are position invariant for faces
    Kovacs, Gyula
    Iffland, Lara
    Vidnyanszky, Zoltan
    Greenlee, Mark W.
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2012, 60 (04) : 2128 - 2135
  • [10] Repetition Suppression and Expectation Suppression Are Dissociable in Time in Early Auditory Evoked Fields
    Todorovic, Ana
    de lange, Floris P.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2012, 32 (39): : 13389 - 13395