Abstract

Perceptual expectation can attenuate repetition suppression, the stimulus-induced neuronal response generated by repeated stimulation, suggesting that repetition suppression is a top-down modulatory phenomenon. However, it is still unclear which high-level brain areas are involved and how they interact with low-level brain areas. Further, the temporal range over which perceptual expectation can effectively attenuate repetition suppression effects remains unclear. To elucidate the details of this top-down modulatory process, we used two short and long inter-stimulus intervals for a perceptual expectation paradigm of paired stimulation. We found that top-down modulation enhanced the response to the unexpected stimulus when repetition suppression was weak and that the effect disappeared at 1,000 ms prior to stimulus exposure. The high-level areas involved in this process included the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG_L) and left parietal lobule (IPL_L). We also found two systems providing modulatory input to the right fusiform face area (FFA_R): one from IFG_L and the other from IPL_L. Most importantly, we identified two states of networks through which perceptual expectation modulates sensory responses: one is a dynamic state and the other is a steady state. Our results provide the first functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) evidence of temporally nested networks in brain processing.

Highlights

  • Perceptual expectation can attenuate repetition suppression, the stimulus-induced neuronal response generated by repeated stimulation, suggesting that repetition suppression is a top-down modulatory phenomenon

  • These studies did not examine some systematic details of the suppression mechanism related to perceptual expectation, including the temporal range over which expectation probability can effectively suppress the neuronal response to the stimulus or the high-level areas involved in repetition suppression and how they interact with the low-level areas within the network

  • For trials with 1,000 ms inter-stimulus intervals (ISIs), no significant interaction (F(1, 10) = 0.08, p = 0.78) and no significant main effects of the block and of the trial were found (F(1,10) = 1.05, p = 0.33 and F(1, 10) = 0.25, p = 0.63, respectively) (Fig. 3). This indicates that enhancement or repetition suppression did not occur for the trials at 1,000 ms ISI; those had been recovered during the interval

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Summary

Introduction

Perceptual expectation can attenuate repetition suppression, the stimulus-induced neuronal response generated by repeated stimulation, suggesting that repetition suppression is a top-down modulatory phenomenon. These results indicate that only for 250 ms ISI, expectation-related neuronal processing for response enhancement and repetition suppression initiated at IPL_L before the start of neuronal stimulus processing at FFA_R, IFG_L, and FG_L.

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