4.7 Article

Decreasing Alertness Modulates Perceptual Decision-Making

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 42, 期 3, 页码 454-473

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0182-21.2021

关键词

alertness; arousal; attention; decision-making; evidence accumulation; reconfiguration

资金

  1. Gates Cambridge Scholarship
  2. Wellcome Trust Biomedical Research Fellowship [WT093811MA]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study used EEG and behavioral modeling to examine the cognitive and neural dynamics of decision-making in awake and low-alertness states in humans. The results showed that during periods of low alertness, reaction times were slower, attention to the left side of space decreased, and the rate of evidence accumulation was lower. Additionally, there was a delay in the neural signatures distinguishing between left and right decisions and a spatial reconfiguration of neural activity. These findings reveal the mechanisms of cognitive resilience in the face of decreased alertness.
The ability to make decisions based on external information, prior knowledge, and evidence is a crucial aspect of cognition and may determine the success and survival of an organism. Despite extensive work on decision-making mechanisms/models, understanding the effects of alertness on neural and cognitive processes remain limited. Here we use EEG and behavioral modeling to characterize cognitive and neural dynamics of perceptual decision-making in awake/low alertness periods in humans (14 male, 18 female) and characterize the compensatory mechanisms as alertness decreases. Well-rested human participants, changing between full-wakefulness and low alertness, performed an auditory tone-localization task, and its behavioral dynamics were quantified with psychophysics, signal detection theory, and drift-diffusion modeling, revealing slower reaction times, inattention to the left side of space, and a lower rate of evidence accumulation in periods of low alertness. Unconstrained multivariate pattern analysis (decoding) showed a similar to 280 ms delayed onset driven by low alertness of the neural signatures differentiating between left and right decision, with a spatial reconfiguration from centroparietal to lateral frontal regions 150-360 ms. To understand the neural compensatory mechanisms with decreasing alertness, we connected the evidence-accumulation behavioral parameter to the neural activity, showing in the early periods (125-325 ms) a shift in the associated patterns from right parietal regions in awake, to right frontoparietal during low alertness. This change in the neurobehavioral dynamics for central accumulation-related cognitive processes defines a clear reconfiguration of the brain networks' regions and dynamics needed for the implementation of decision-making, revealing mechanisms of resilience of cognition when challenged by decreased alertness.

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