Pre‐stimulus alpha‐band power and phase fluctuations originate from different neural sources and exert distinct impact on stimulus‐evoked responses

Zazio, Agnese, Ruhnau, Philipp orcid iconORCID: 0000-0001-6546-7312, Weisz, Nathan and Wutz, Andreas (2021) Pre‐stimulus alpha‐band power and phase fluctuations originate from different neural sources and exert distinct impact on stimulus‐evoked responses. European Journal of Neuroscience, 55 (11-12). pp. 3178-3190. ISSN 0953-816X

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.15138

Abstract

Ongoing oscillatory neural activity before stimulus onset influences subsequent visual perception. Specifically, both the power and the phase of oscillations in the alpha-frequency band (9–13 Hz) have been reported to predict the detection of visual stimuli. Up to now, the functional mechanisms underlying pre-stimulus power and phase effects on upcoming visual percepts are debated. Here, we used magnetoencephalography recordings together with a near-threshold visual detection task to investigate the neural generators of pre-stimulus power and phase and their impact on subsequent visual-evoked responses. Pre-stimulus alpha-band power and phase opposition effects were found consistent with previous reports. Source localization suggested clearly distinct neural generators for these pre-stimulus effects: Power effects were mainly found in occipital-temporal regions, whereas phase effects also involved prefrontal areas. In order to be functionally relevant, the pre-stimulus correlates should influence post-stimulus processing. Using a trial-sorting approach, we observed that only pre-stimulus power modulated the Hits versus Misses difference in the evoked response, a well-established post-stimulus neural correlate of near-threshold perception, such that trials with stronger pre-stimulus power effect showed greater post-stimulus difference. By contrast, no influence of pre-stimulus phase effects were found. In sum, our study shows distinct generators for two pre-stimulus neural patterns predicting visual perception, and that only alpha power impacts the post-stimulus correlate of conscious access. This underlines the functional relevance of prestimulus alpha power on perceptual awareness, while questioning the role of alpha phase.


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