论文标题
可见和想象的物体位置的重叠神经表示
Overlapping neural representations for the position of visible and imagined objects
论文作者
论文摘要
即使对象被暂时遮住,人类也可以秘密地跟踪对象的位置。当没有物理刺激供大脑跟踪时,我们跟踪运动物体的能力的神经机制是什么?一种可能性是,使用内部生成的表示形式类似于馈送前传感机制产生的表示,大脑“填充”有关想象的对象的信息。或者,大脑可能会部署高阶机制,例如使用集成视觉信号和运动动力学的对象跟踪模型。在本研究中,我们使用脑电图和时间分辨的多元模式分析来研究可见和想象的对象的空间处理。参与者跟踪了一个对象,该对象在固定范围内移动,连续六个位置占据。他们被要求想象该物体在消失后继续在同一轨迹上,并将注意力转移到相应的位置。 EEG数据的时间分辨解码显示,可见刺激的位置可以在图像发作后尽快解码,这与早期视网膜视觉过程一致。为了处理看不见的/想象的位置,神经活动的模式类似于刺激驱动的中级视觉过程,但比感知机制更早地检测到,这暗示了一种预期的和更可变的跟踪机制。编码模型表明,空间表示的想象比可见的刺激要弱得多。因此,监视想象的对象的位置,利用类似的感知过程和注意力过程与实际存在但具有不同的时间动力学的对象。这些结果表明,内部生成的表示依赖于自上而下的过程,它们的时机受刺激的可预测性的影响。
Humans can covertly track the position of an object, even if the object is temporarily occluded. What are the neural mechanisms underlying our capacity to track moving objects when there is no physical stimulus for the brain to track? One possibility is that the brain 'fills-in' information about imagined objects using internally generated representations similar to those generated by feed-forward perceptual mechanisms. Alternatively, the brain might deploy a higher order mechanism, for example using an object tracking model that integrates visual signals and motion dynamics. In the present study, we used EEG and time-resolved multivariate pattern analyses to investigate the spatial processing of visible and imagined objects. Participants tracked an object that moved in discrete steps around fixation, occupying six consecutive locations. They were asked to imagine that the object continued on the same trajectory after it disappeared and move their attention to the corresponding positions. Time-resolved decoding of EEG data revealed that the location of the visible stimuli could be decoded shortly after image onset, consistent with early retinotopic visual processes. For processing of unseen/imagined positions, the patterns of neural activity resembled stimulus-driven mid-level visual processes, but were detected earlier than perceptual mechanisms, implicating an anticipatory and more variable tracking mechanism. Encoding models revealed that spatial representations were much weaker for imagined than visible stimuli. Monitoring the position of imagined objects thus utilises similar perceptual and attentional processes as monitoring objects that are actually present, but with different temporal dynamics. These results indicate that internally generated representations rely on top-down processes, and their timing is influenced by the predictability of the stimulus.