Back to Search Start Over

Neural variability quenching during decision-making: Neural individuality and its prestimulus complexity.

Authors :
Wolff, Annemarie
Yao, Lin
Gomez-Pilar, Javier
Shoaran, Mahsa
Jiang, Ning
Northoff, Georg
Source :
NeuroImage. May2019, Vol. 192, p1-14. 14p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Abstract The spontaneous activity of the brain interacts with stimulus-induced activity which is manifested in event-related amplitude and its trial-to-trial variability (TTV). TTV describes the variability in the amplitude of the stimulus-evoked response across trials, and it is generally observed to be reduced, or quenched. While such TTV quenching has been observed on both the cellular and regional levels, its exact behavioral relevance and neuronal basis remains unclear. Applying a novel paradigm for testing neural markers of individuality in internally-guided decision-making, we here investigated whether TTV (i) represents an individually specific response by comparing individualized vs shared stimuli; and (ii) is mediated by the complexity of prestimulus activity as measured by the Lempel-Ziv Complexity index (LZC). We observed that TTV - and other electrophysiological markers such as ERP, ERSP, and ITC – showed first significant differences between individualized and shared stimuli (while controlling for task-related effects) specifically in the alpha and beta frequency bands, and secondly that TTV in the beta band correlated significantly with reaction time and eLORETA activity. Moreover, we demonstrate that the complexity (LZC) of neuronal activity is higher in the prestimulus period while it decreases during the poststimulus period, with the former also correlating specifically with poststimulus individualized TTV in alpha (but not with shared TTV). Together, our results show that the TTV represents a marker of 'neural individualization' which, being related to internal processes on both neural and psychological levels, is mediated by the information complexity of prestimulus activity. More generally, our results inform the pre-post-stimulus dynamics of rest-stimulus interaction, which is a basic and ubiquitous neural phenomenon in the brain and highly relevant for mental features including their individuality. Highlights • TTV showed significant differences between individualized and shared stimuli. • TTV in the beta band correlated with reaction time and eLORETA activity. • LZC of neuronal activity is higher in the prestimulus and decreases during the poststimulus period. • Prestimulus LZC correlates with poststimulus individualized TTV in the alpha band. • TTV represents a marker of 'neural individualization' mediated by prestimulus complexity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Subjects

Subjects :
*INDIVIDUALITY
*REACTION time

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10538119
Volume :
192
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
NeuroImage
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
135772237
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.02.070