학술논문

Differential Sources for 2 Neural Signatures of Target Detection: An Electrocorticography Study.
Document Type
article
Source
Cerebral Cortex. 28(1)
Subject
Neurodegenerative
Epilepsy
Neurosciences
Clinical Research
Brain Disorders
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Neurological
Adolescent
Adult
Attention
Auditory Perception
Brain
Electrocorticography
Evoked Potentials
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neuropsychological Tests
Signal Detection
Psychological
Visual Perception
Young Adult
electrocorticography
high frequency band
neural generators
P3b
target detection
Psychology
Cognitive Sciences
Experimental Psychology
Language
Abstract
Electrophysiology and neuroimaging provide conflicting evidence for the neural contributions to target detection. Scalp electroencephalography (EEG) studies localize the P3b event-related potential component mainly to parietal cortex, whereas neuroimaging studies report activations in both frontal and parietal cortices. We addressed this discrepancy by examining the sources that generate the target-detection process using electrocorticography (ECoG). We recorded ECoG activity from cortex in 14 patients undergoing epilepsy monitoring, as they performed an auditory or visual target-detection task. We examined target-related responses in 2 domains: high frequency band (HFB) activity and the P3b. Across tasks, we observed a greater proportion of electrodes that showed target-specific HFB power relative to P3b over frontal cortex, but their proportions over parietal cortex were comparable. Notably, there was minimal overlap in the electrodes that showed target-specific HFB and P3b activity. These results revealed that the target-detection process is characterized by at least 2 different neural markers with distinct cortical distributions. Our findings suggest that separate neural mechanisms are driving the differential patterns of activity observed in scalp EEG and neuroimaging studies, with the P3b reflecting EEG findings and HFB activity reflecting neuroimaging findings, highlighting the notion that target detection is not a unitary phenomenon.