4.5 Article

Prestimulus alpha power but not phase influences visual discrimination of long-duration visual stimuli

期刊

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 55, 期 11-12, 页码 3141-3153

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.15169

关键词

alpha; EEG; individual alpha frequency; oscillation; perception; signal detection theory; visual

资金

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [KE1828/4-1]

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Occipital oscillations in the alpha band play a crucial role in visual perception and attention, affecting the detection of challenging visual stimuli. The phase of alpha oscillations prior to stimulus onset is critical for visual stimulus detection. Longer presentation times may attenuate response bias and lead to increased perceptual accuracy.
Occipital oscillations in the alpha band are closely related to visual perception and attention. In multiple studies, increased alpha power has been shown to reduce detection rates of hard-to-detect visual stimuli. Recent studies explain this finding by a shift in perceptual bias. Moreover, the phase of alpha oscillations prior to stimulus onset appears to be critical for the detection of visual stimuli. This is explained by a shift in cortical excitability over the course of each alpha cycle. However, prior studies often used short presentation times of visual stimuli at the perceptual threshold. Here, we use longer presentation times to elucidate whether the same mechanisms hold for the perception of salient but challenging visual stimuli presented for up to 1,500 ms. To this end, we presented participants with hard to distinguish but salient upright or tilted Gaussian gratings in a two-alternative forced choice task, while recording occipital electroencephalographic activity. Previous reports link alpha power to stimulus detection hit rates, and we found that low prestimulus power at the individual alpha frequency relates to higher perceptual accuracy. Contrary to recent findings, we neither found an influence of alpha power on criterion, nor an influence of alpha phase on perception or response speed. We argue that longer presentation times might attenuate a possible response bias, and increased excitability might sharpen the discrimination ability, thereby leading to increased perceptual accuracy and unaffected response criterion.

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