Expectations do not alter early sensory processing during perceptual decision-making
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Author list: Rungratsameetaweemana N., Itthipuripat S., Salazar A., Serences J.T.
Publisher: Society for Neuroscience
Publication year: 2018
Journal: The Journal of Neuroscience (0270-6474)
Volume number: 38
Issue number: 24
Start page: 5632
End page: 5648
Number of pages: 17
ISSN: 0270-6474
eISSN: 1529-2401
Languages: English-Great Britain (EN-GB)
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Abstract
Two factors play important roles in shaping perception: the allocation of selective attention to behaviorally relevant sensory features, and prior expectations about regularities in the environment. Signal detection theory proposes distinct roles of attention and expectation on decision-making such that attention modulates early sensory processing, whereas expectation influences the selection and execution of motor responses. Challenging this classic framework, recent studies suggest that expectations about sensory regularities enhance the encoding and accumulation of sensory evidence during decision-making. However, it is possible, that these findings reflect well documented attentional modulations in visual cortex. Here, we tested this framework in a group of male and female human participants by examining how expectations about stimulus features (orientation and color) and expectations about motor responses impacted electro-encephalography(EEG) markers of early sensory processing and the accumulation of sensoryevidenceduringdecision-making(theearly visual negative potential and the centro-parietal positive potential, respectively). We first demonstrate that these markers are sensitive to changes in the amount of sensory evidence in the display. Then we show, counter to recent findings, that neither marker is modulated by either feature or motor expectations, despite a robust effect of expectations on behavior. Instead, violating expectations about likely sensory features and motor responses impacts posterior alpha and frontal theta oscillations, signals thought to index overall processing time and cognitive conflict. These findings are inconsistent with recent theoretical accounts and suggest instead that expectations primarily influence decisions by modulating post-perceptual stages of information processing. ฉ 2018 the authors.
Keywords
Cognitive control, Expectation, Sensory modulation