Prior expectations induce pre-stimulus sensory templates
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Dataset
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Restricted access
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Organization
PI Group Predictive Brain
SW OZ DCC CO
Audience(s)
Life sciences
Languages used
English
Key words
perceptual inference; prediction; predictive codingAbstract
Perception can be described as a process of inference, integrating bottom-up sensory inputs and top-down expectations. However, it is unclear how this process is neurally implemented. It has been proposed that expectations lead to pre-stimulus baseline increases in sensory neurons tuned to the expected stimulus, which in turn affects the processing of subsequent stimuli. Recent fMRI studies have revealed stimulus-specific patterns of activation in sensory cortex as a result of expectation, but this method lacks the temporal resolution necessary to distinguish pre- from post-stimulus processes. Here, we combined human MEG with multivariate decoding techniques to probe the representational content of neural signals in a time-resolved manner. We observed a representation of expected stimuli in the neural signal well before they were presented, demonstrating that expectations indeed induce a pre-activation of stimulus templates. These results suggest a mechanism for how predictive perception can be neurally implemented.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Datasets [1911]
- Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [4040]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [30461]