4.4 Article

Neural dynamics of stimulus-response representations during inhibitory control

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 126, Issue 2, Pages 680-692

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00163.2021

Keywords

EEG; MVPA; response inhibition; representations; stimulus-response binding; theory of event coding

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [FOR 2698, SFB TRR 265]

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In this research, the study investigated the impact and neurophysiological dynamics of event file representations in response inhibition. The findings suggest that overlapping features in stimuli used for response execution or inhibition can compromise task performance, with event file coding processes affecting response inhibition through partial repetition costs. Through temporal generalization MVPA, it was identified that event file representations are stable over several hundred milliseconds and show sustained activation patterns of neural dynamics during inhibitory control.
The investigation of action control processes is one major field in cognitive neuroscience and several theoretical frameworks have been proposed. One established framework is the Theory of Event Coding (TEC). However, only rarely, this framework has been used in the context of response inhibition and how stimulus-response association or binding processes modulate response inhibition performance. Particularly the neural dynamics of stimulus-response representations during inhibitory control are elusive. To address this, we examined n = 40 healthy controls and combined temporal EEG signal decomposition with source localization and temporal generalization multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA). We show that overlaps in features of stimuli used to trigger either response execution or inhibition compromised task performance. According to TEC, this indicates that binding processes in event file representations impact response inhibition through partial repetition costs. In the EEG data, reconfiguration of event files modulated processes in time windows well-known to reflect distinct response inhibition mechanisms. Crucially, event file coding processes were only evident in a specific fraction of neurophysiological activity associated with the inferior parietal cortex (BA40). Within that specific fraction of neurophysiological activity, the decoding of the dynamics of event file representations using temporal generalization MVPA suggested that event file representations are stable across several hundred milliseconds, and that event file coding during inhibitory control is reflected by a sustained activation pattern of neural dynamics. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The mental representation of how stimulus input translate into the appropriate response is central for goal-directed behavior. However, little is known about the dynamics of such representations on the neurophysiological level when it comes to the inhibition of motor processes. This dynamic is shown in the current study.

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