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Sedation Modulates Frontotemporal Predictive Coding Circuits and the Double Surprise Acceleration Effect.

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

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Authors

Witon, Adrien 
Shirazibehehsti, Amirali 
Cooke, Jennifer 
Aviles, Alberto 
Adapa, Ram 

Abstract

Two important theories in cognitive neuroscience are predictive coding (PC) and the global workspace (GW) theory. A key research task is to understand how these two theories relate to one another, and particularly, how the brain transitions from a predictive early state to the eventual engagement of a brain-scale state (the GW). To address this question, we present a source-localization of EEG responses evoked by the local-global task-an experimental paradigm that engages a predictive hierarchy, which encompasses the GW. The results of our source reconstruction suggest three phases of processing. The first phase involves the sensory (here auditory) regions of the superior temporal lobe and predicts sensory regularities over a short timeframe (as per the local effect). The third phase is brain-scale, involving inferior frontal, as well as inferior and superior parietal regions, consistent with a global neuronal workspace (GNW; as per the global effect). Crucially, our analysis suggests that there is an intermediate (second) phase, involving modulatory interactions between inferior frontal and superior temporal regions. Furthermore, sedation with propofol reduces modulatory interactions in the second phase. This selective effect is consistent with a PC explanation of sedation, with propofol acting on descending predictions of the precision of prediction errors; thereby constraining access to the GNW.

Description

Keywords

EEG analysis, global workspace, predictive coding, source inversion, Acceleration, Adult, Brain, Comprehension, Consciousness, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Humans, Male, Parietal Lobe, Temporal Lobe, Young Adult

Journal Title

Cereb Cortex

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1047-3211
1460-2199

Volume Title

30

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Rights

All rights reserved
Sponsorship
Wellcome Trust (083660/Z/07/Z)
University if Kent Internal Funds to Dr. Bowman