Two distinctive stages of novelty processing revealed by high-density EEG based source imaging

Eric Tsang,Rui Sun, Xueyan Niu, Wei Yan Renee Fung,Akaysha C. Tang

crossref(2021)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Novelty detection is an evolutionarily significant and ancient function as well as a relatively stable function whose early life status marks for long-term developmental outcomes and predicts a range of adult functions. While various brain regions have been shown to respond to environmental novelty, how different brain regions coordinate in novelty related information processing remains under-explored. Here using a combination of high-density EEG, second order blind identification (SOBI), and a standard visual oddball task, we test, in humans, a two-stage novelty processing hypothesis which states that two distinct stages of novelty processing exist, one involves early-occurring domain-specific neural activity in the sensory processing areas of the brain and the other involves later-occurring domain-general neural activity involving brain regions beyond the sensory cortices. We found that: (1) a significant Novelty effect (oddball effects) not only in the SOBI-recovered Late component (P300 component) but also in the Early component (N150 visual) offering first EEG evidence for oddball effect in the sensory domain; (2) a significant Stage (Early vs Late) by Frequency (delta, theta, alpha, beta, and gamma) interaction effect indicating two functionally dissociable mechanisms underlying novelty detection; (3) a significantly shorter latency in odd-ball related theta power increase in the Early visual than in the late P300 component. These results not only offer support for the two-stage novelty processing theory but also provide new evidence for an early involvement of theta power increase in the novelty processing.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要