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Causal roles of prefrontal cortex during spontaneous perceptual switching are determined by brain state dynamics

Takamitsu Watanabe

2021eLife25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The prefrontal cortex (PFC) is thought to orchestrate cognitive dynamics. However, in tests of bistable visual perception, no direct evidence supporting such presumable causal roles of the PFC has been reported except for a recent work. Here, using a novel brain-state-dependent neural stimulation system, we identified causal effects on percept dynamics in three PFC activities-right frontal eye fields, dorsolateral PFC (DLPFC), and inferior frontal cortex (IFC). The causality is behaviourally detectable only when we track brain state dynamics and modulate the PFC activity in brain-state-/state-history-dependent manners. The behavioural effects are underpinned by transient neural changes in the brain state dynamics, and such neural effects are quantitatively explainable by structural transformations of the hypothetical energy landscapes. Moreover, these findings indicate distinct functions of the three PFC areas: in particular, the DLPFC enhances the integration of two PFC-active brain states, whereas IFC promotes the functional segregation between them. This work resolves the controversy over the PFC roles in spontaneous perceptual switching and underlines brain state dynamics in fine investigations of brain-behaviour causality.

Topics & Concepts

NeurosciencePerceptPrefrontal cortexDorsolateral prefrontal cortexPsychologyPerceptionCausality (physics)CognitionMechanism (biology)NeuroimagingDynamics (music)NeurophysiologyResting state fMRICognitive psychologyPhysicsPedagogyQuantum mechanicsNeural dynamics and brain functionFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesVisual perception and processing mechanisms
Causal roles of prefrontal cortex during spontaneous perceptual switching are determined by brain state dynamics | Litcius