Neural habituation enhances novelty detection: an EEG study of rapidly presented words.
Cliques: 274
ID: 113650
2020
Metricas de Qualidade e Desempenho do Artigo
Qualidade Geral
Improving Quality
0.0
/100
Combina dados de engajamento com qualidade academica avaliada por IA
Engajamento do Leitor
Emerging Content
12.3
/100
41 visualizacoes
41 leitores
Em Alta
Avaliacao de Qualidade por IA
Nao analisado
Resumo
Huber and O'Reilly (2003) proposed that neural habituation aids perceptual processing, separating neural responses to currently viewed objects from recently viewed objects. However, synaptic depression has costs, producing repetition deficits. Prior work confirmed the transition from repetition benefits to deficits with increasing duration of a prime object, but the prediction of enhanced novelty detection was not tested. The current study examined this prediction with a same/different word priming task, using support vector machine (SVM) classification of EEG data, ERP analyses focused on the N400, and dynamic neural network simulations fit to behavioral data to provide a priori predictions of the ERP effects. Subjects made same/different judgements to a response word in relation to an immediately preceding brief target word; prime durations were short (50ms) or long (400ms), and long durations decreased P100/N170 responses to the target word, suggesting that this manipulation increased habituation. Following long duration primes, correct "different" judgments of primed response words increased, evidencing enhanced novelty detection. An SVM classifier predicted trial-by-trial behavior with 66.34% accuracy on held-out data, with greatest predictive power at a time pattern consistent with the N400. The habituation model was augmented with a maintained semantics layer (i.e., working memory) to generate behavior and N400 predictions. A second experiment used response-locked ERPs, confirming the model's assumption that residual activation in working memory is the basis of novelty decisions. These results support the theory that neural habituation enhances novelty detection, and the model assumption that the N400 reflects updating of semantic information in working memory.
| Chave de Referencia |
jacob2020neuralcomputational
Use esta chave para citacao automatica no manuscrito ao usar
SciMatic Gerenciador de Manuscritos ou Gerenciador de Teses
|
|---|---|
| Autores | Jacob, Len P L;Huber, David E; |
| Periodico | computational brain & behavior |
| Ano | 2020 |
| DOI |
10.1007/s42113-019-00071-w
|
| URL | |
| Palavras-chave |
Citacoes
Nenhuma citacao encontrada. Para adicionar uma citacao, entre em contato com o administrador em info@scimatic.org
Comentarios
Nenhum comentario ainda. Seja o primeiro a comentar neste artigo.