Frontal Deactivation and the Efficacy of Statistical Learning: Neural Mechanisms Accompanying Exposure to Visual Statistical Sequences

被引:0
|
作者
Brylka, Martyna [1 ]
Wojciechowski, Jakub [1 ]
Wolak, Tomasz [1 ]
Cygan, Hanna B. [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Physiol & Pathol Hearing, Warsaw, Poland
关键词
VENTROMEDIAL PREFRONTAL CORTEX; CAUDATE-NUCLEUS; FUNCTIONAL CONNECTIVITY; LONG-TERM; IMPLICIT; BRAIN; ATTENTION; LANGUAGE; MEMORY; FMRI;
D O I
10.1162/jocn_a_02283
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Statistical learning is the cognitive ability to rapidly identify structure and meaning in unfamiliar streams of sensory experience, even in the absence of feedback. Despite extensive studies, the neurocognitive mechanisms underlying this phenomenon still require further clarification under varying cognitive conditions. Here, we examined neural mechanisms during the first exposure to visually presented sequences in 47 healthy participants. We used two types of visual objects: abstract symbols and pictures of cartoon-like animals. This allowed us to compare informational processing mechanisms with defined distinguishing features. Participants achieved better performance for sequences with easy-to-name than difficult-to-name abstract stimuli. fMRI results revealed greater activation in widespread brain regions in response to random versus statistical sequences for all stimuli types. Behavioral accuracy was associated with increased deactivation of the ventromedial PFC for easy-to-name statistical versus random sequences. For difficult-to-name statistical versus random sequences, performance correlated with dorsomedial prefrontal cortex deactivation. ROI analysis showed a generally positive involvement of the caudate head in sequence processing with significantly stronger activity during the first run of performing the task. Functional connectivity analysis of prefrontal deactivation regions revealed significant connectivity with nodes of the salience network for both object types and inverse connectivity with the caudate head only for easy-to-name objects. The results indicated that distinct subregions of PFC modulate task performance depending on the visual stimulus characteristic. They also showed that among striatal regions, only the head of the caudate was sensitive to initial exposure to visual statistical information.
引用
收藏
页码:895 / 914
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Computational and neural mechanisms of statistical pain learning
    Mancini, Flavia
    Zhang, Suyi
    Seymour, Ben
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2022, 13 (01)
  • [2] Neural Mechanisms of Memory Enhancement and Impairment Induced by Visual Statistical Learning
    Otsuka, Sachio
    Saiki, Jun
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2020, 32 (09) : 1749 - 1763
  • [3] Neural Evidence of Statistical Learning: Efficient Detection of Visual Regularities Without Awareness
    Turk-Browne, Nicholas B.
    Scholl, Brian J.
    Chun, Marvin M.
    Johnson, Marcia K.
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 21 (10) : 1934 - 1945
  • [4] Visual linguistic statistical learning is traceable through neural entrainment
    Saringer, Szabolcs
    Kaposvari, Peter
    Benyhe, Andras
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2024, 61 (08)
  • [5] The Cognitive Mechanism and Neural Bases of Statistical Learning
    Wu Qiu-Yan
    Deng Yuan
    PROGRESS IN BIOCHEMISTRY AND BIOPHYSICS, 2012, 39 (12) : 1167 - 1173
  • [6] Visual statistical learning requires attention
    Duncan, Dock H.
    van Moorselaar, Dirk
    Theeuwes, Jan
    PSYCHONOMIC BULLETIN & REVIEW, 2024,
  • [7] Reward impacts visual statistical learning
    Su Hyoun Park
    Leeland L. Rogers
    Matthew R. Johnson
    Timothy J. Vickery
    Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience, 2021, 21 : 1176 - 1195
  • [8] Reward impacts visual statistical learning
    Park, Su Hyoun
    Rogers, Leeland L.
    Johnson, Matthew R.
    Vickery, Timothy J.
    COGNITIVE AFFECTIVE & BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2021, 21 (06) : 1176 - 1195
  • [9] Age Differences in Visual Statistical Learning
    Campbell, Karen L.
    Zimerman, Shira
    Healey, M. Karl
    Lee, Michelle M. S.
    Hasher, Lynn
    PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 2012, 27 (03) : 650 - 656
  • [10] Musical instrument familiarity affects statistical learning of tone sequences
    Van Hedger, Stephen C.
    Johnsrude, Ingrid S.
    Batterink, Laura J.
    COGNITION, 2022, 218