Σφακιανάκης Αλέξανδρος
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Τετάρτη 25 Ιανουαρίου 2017

Evidence accumulation detected in BOLD signal using slow perceptual decision making

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Publication date: Available online 25 January 2017
Source:Journal of Neuroscience Methods
Author(s): Paul M. Krueger, Marieke K. van Vugt, Patrick Simen, Leigh Nystrom, Philip Holmes, Jonathan D. Cohen
BackgroundWe assessed whether evidence accumulation could be observed in the BOLD signal during perceptual decision making. This presents a challenge since the hemodynamic response is slow, while perceptual decisions are typically fast.New MethodGuided by theoretical predictions of the drift diffusion model, we slowed down decisions by penalizing participants for incorrect responses. Second, we distinguished BOLD activity related to stimulus detection (modeled using a boxcar) from activity related to integration (modeled using a ramp) by minimizing the collinearity of GLM regressors. This was achieved by dissecting a boxcar into its two most orthogonal components: an "up-ramp" and a "down-ramp." Third, we used a control condition in which stimuli and responses were similar to the experimental condition, but that did not engage evidence accumulation of the stimuli.ResultsThe results revealed an absence of areas in parietal cortex that have been proposed to drive perceptual decision making but have recently come into question; and newly identified regions that are candidates for involvement in evidence accumulation.Comparison with Existing MethodsPrevious fMRI studies have either used fast perceptual decision making, which precludes the measurement of evidence accumulation, or slowed down responses by gradually revealing stimuli. The latter approach confounds perceptual detection with evidence accumulation because accumulation is constrained by perceptual input.ConclusionsWe slowed down the decision making process itself while leaving perceptual information intact. This provided a more sensitive and selective observation of brain regions associated with the evidence accumulation processes underlying perceptual decision making than previous



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