Prior Information Biases Stimulus Representations during Vibrotactile Decision Making
Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience, Vol. 22, No. 5, pgs. 875-887, 2010.
Claudia Preuschhof, Torsten Schubert, Arno Villringer, and Hauke R. Heekeren
Neurophysiological data suggest that the integration of prior
information and incoming sensory evidence represents the neural basis
of the decision-making process. Here, we aimed to identify the brain
structures involved in the integration of prior information about the
average magnitude of a stimulus set and current sensory evidence.
Specifically, we investigated whether prior average information already
biases vibrotactile decision making during stimulus perception and
maintenance before the comparison process. For this purpose, we used a
vibrotactile delayed discrimination task and fMRI. At the behavioral
level, participants showed the time-order effect. This psychophysical
phenomenon has been shown to result from the influence of prior
information on the perception of and the memory for currently presented
stimuli. Similarly, the fMRI signal reflected the integration of prior
information about the average vibration frequency and the currently
presented vibration frequency. During stimulus encoding, the fMRI
signal in primary and secondary somatosensory (S2) cortex, thalamus,
and ventral premotor cortex mirrored an integration process. During
stimulus maintenance, only a region in the intraparietal sulcus showed
this modulation by prior average information. Importantly, the fMRI
signal in S2 and intraparietal sulcus correlated with individual
differences in the degree to which participants integrated prior
average information. This strongly suggests that these two regions play
a pivotal role in the integration process. Taken together, these
results support the notion that the integration of current sensory and
prior average information is a major feature of how the human brain
perceives, remembers, and judges magnitude stimuli.
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