A1 Vertaisarvioitu alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä lehdessä

Subjective visual awareness emerges prior to P3




TekijätKoivisto M, Salminen-Vaparanta N, Grassini S, Revonsuo A

KustantajaWILEY-BLACKWELL

Julkaisuvuosi2016

JournalEuropean Journal of Neuroscience

Tietokannassa oleva lehden nimiEUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE

Lehden akronyymiEUR J NEUROSCI

Vuosikerta43

Numero12

Aloitussivu1601

Lopetussivu1611

Sivujen määrä11

ISSN0953-816X

eISSN1460-9568

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.13264


Tiivistelmä
Studies on the neural basis of visual awareness, the subjective experience of seeing, have found several potential neural correlates of visual awareness. Some of them may not directly correlate with awareness but with post-perceptual processes, such as reporting one's awareness of the stimulus. We dissociated potential electrophysiological correlates of visual awareness from those occurring during response selection and thus co-occurring with post-perceptual processing. The participants performed two GO-NOGO conditions. In the aware-GO condition they responded with a key press when they were aware of the stimulus and withheld responding when they were unaware of it. In the unaware-GO condition they withheld responding when they were aware and responded when they were not aware of the stimulus. Thus, event-related potentials could be measured to aware and unaware trials when responding was required and when not required. The results revealed that the N200 amplitude (180-280ms) over the occipital and posterior temporal cortex was enhanced in aware trials as compared with trials without awareness. This effect (visual awareness negativity, VAN) did not depend on responding. The amplitude of P3 (350-450ms) also was enhanced in aware trials as compared with unaware trials. In addition, the amplitudes in the P3 time window depended on responding: they were greater when awareness was mapped to GO-response than when not, suggesting that P3 reflects post-perceptual processing, that is, it occurs after awareness has emerged. These findings support theories of visual awareness that assume a relatively early onset of visual awareness before P3.



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