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The ability to extract regularities from the environment is arguably an adaptive characteristic of intelligent systems. In the context of speech, statistical learning is thought to be an important mechanism for language acquisition. By considering individual differences in speech auditory-motor synchronization, an independent component analysis of fMRI data revealed that the neural substrates of statistical word form learning are not fully shared across individuals. While a network of auditory and superior pre/motor regions is universally activated in the process of learning, a fronto-parietal network is instead additionally and selectively engaged by some individuals, boosting their performance. Furthermore, interfering with the use of this network via articulatory suppression (producing irrelevant speech during learning) normalizes performance across the entire sample. Our work provides novel insights on language-related statistical learning and reconciles previous contrasting findings, while highlighting the need to factor in fundamental individual differences for a precise characterization of cognitive phenomena.
Across languages, the speech signal is characterized by a predominant modulation of the amplitude spectrum between about 4.3-5.5Hz, reflecting the production and processing of linguistic information chunks (syllables, words) every ∼200ms. Interestingly, ∼200ms is also the typical duration of eye fixations during reading. Prompted by this observation, we demonstrate that German readers sample written text at ∼5Hz. A subsequent meta-analysis with 142 studies from 14 languages replicates this result, but also shows that sampling frequencies vary across languages between 3.9Hz and 5.2Hz, and that this variation systematically depends on the complexity of the writing systems (character-based vs. alphabetic systems, orthographic transparency). Finally, we demonstrate empirically a positive correlation between speech spectrum and eye-movement sampling in low-skilled readers. Based on this convergent evidence, we propose that during reading, our brain’s linguistic processing systems imprint a preferred processing rate, i.e., the rate of spoken language production and perception, onto the oculomotor system.
Precisely estimating event timing is essential for survival, yet temporal distortions are ubiquitous in our daily sensory experience. Here, we tested whether the relative position, relative duration and relative distance in time of two sequentially-organized events —standard S, with constant duration, and comparison C, varying trial-by-trial— are causal factors in generating temporal distortions. We found that temporal distortions emerge when the first event is shorter than the second event. Importantly, a significant interaction suggests that a longer ISI helps counteracting such serial distortion effect only the constant S is in first position, but not if the unpredictable C is in first position. These results suggest the existence of a perceptual bias in perceiving ordered event durations, mechanistically contributing to distortion in time perception. We simulated our behavioral results with a Bayesian model and replicated the finding that participants disproportionately expand first-position dynamic (unpredictable) short events. Our results clarify the mechanics generating time distortions by identifying a hitherto unknown duration-dependent encoding inefficiency in human serial temporal perception, akin to a strong prior that can be overridden for highly predictable sensory events but unfolds for unpredictable ones.
Research points to neurofunctional differences underlying fluent speech production in stutterers and non-stutterers. There has been considerably less work focusing on the processes that underlie stuttered speech, primarily due to the difficulty of reliably eliciting stuttering in the unnatural contexts associated with neuroimaging experiments. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to test the hypothesis that stuttering events result from global motor inhibition–a “freeze” response typically characterized by increased beta power in nodes of the action-stopping network. We leveraged a novel clinical interview to develop participant-specific stimuli in order to elicit a comparable amount of stuttered and fluent trials. Twenty-nine adult stutterers participated. The paradigm included a cue prior to a go signal, which allowed us to isolate processes associated with stuttered and fluent trials prior to speech initiation. During this pre-speech time window, stuttered trials were associated with greater beta power in the right pre-supplementary motor area, a key node in the action-stopping network, compared to fluent trials. Beta power in the right pre-supplementary area was related to a clinical measure of stuttering severity. We also found that anticipated words identified independently by participants were stuttered more often than those generated by the researchers, which were based on the participants’ reported anticipated sounds. This suggests that global motor inhibition results from stuttering anticipation. This study represents the largest comparison of stuttered and fluent speech to date. The findings provide a foundation for clinical trials that test the efficacy of neuromodulation on stuttering. Moreover, our study demonstrates the feasibility of using our approach for eliciting stuttering during MEG and functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments so that the neurobiological bases of stuttered speech can be further elucidated.
When speech is too fast, the tracking of the acoustic signal along the auditory pathway deteriorates, leading to suboptimal speech segmentation and decoding of speech information. Thus, speech comprehension is limited by the temporal constraints of the auditory system. Here we ask whether individual differences in auditory-motor coupling strength in part shape these temporal constraints. In two behavioral experiments, we characterize individual differences in the comprehension of naturalistic speech as function of the individual synchronization between the auditory and motor systems and the preferred frequencies of the systems. Obviously, speech comprehension declined at higher speech rates. Importantly, however, both higher auditory-motor synchronization and higher spontaneous speech motor production rates were predictive of better speech-comprehension performance. Furthermore, performance increased with higher working memory capacity (Digit Span) and higher linguistic, model-based sentence predictability – particularly so at higher speech rates and for individuals with high auditory-motor synchronization. These findings support the notion of an individual preferred auditory– motor regime that allows for optimal speech processing. The data provide evidence for a model that assigns a central role to motor-system-dependent individual flexibility in continuous speech comprehension.
Speech imagery (the ability to generate internally quasi-perceptual experiences of speech) is a fundamental ability linked to cognitive functions such as inner speech, phonological working memory, and predictive processing. Speech imagery is also considered an ideal tool to test theories of overt speech. The study of speech imagery is challenging, primarily because of the absence of overt behavioral output as well as the difficulty in temporally aligning imagery events across trials and individuals. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) paired with temporal-generalization-based neural decoding and a simple behavioral protocol to determine the processing stages underlying speech imagery. We monitored participants’ lip and jaw micromovements during mental imagery of syllable production using electromyography. Decoding participants’ imagined syllables revealed a sequence of task-elicited representations. Importantly, participants’ micromovements did not discriminate between syllables. The decoded sequence of neuronal patterns maps well onto the predictions of current computational models of overt speech motor control and provides evidence for hypothesized internal and external feedback loops for speech planning and production, respectively. Additionally, the results expose the compressed nature of representations during planning which contrasts with the natural rate at which internal productions unfold. We conjecture that the same sequence underlies the motor-based generation of sensory predictions that modulate speech perception as well as the hypothesized articulatory loop of phonological working memory. The results underscore the potential of speech imagery, based on new experimental approaches and analytical methods, and further pave the way for successful non-invasive brain-computer interfaces.
Music, like language, is characterized by hierarchically organized structure that unfolds over time. Music listening therefore requires not only the tracking of notes and beats but also internally constructing high-level musical structures or phrases and anticipating incoming contents. Unlike for language, mechanistic evidence for online musical segmentation and prediction at a structural level is sparse. We recorded neurophysiological data from participants listening to music in its original forms as well as in manipulated versions with locally or globally reversed harmonic structures. We discovered a low-frequency neural component that modulated the neural rhythms of beat tracking and reliably parsed musical phrases. We next identified phrasal phase precession, suggesting that listeners established structural predictions from ongoing listening experience to track phrasal boundaries. The data point to brain mechanisms that listeners use to segment continuous music at the phrasal level and to predict abstract structural features of music.
Mental imagery provides an essential simulation tool for remembering the past and planning the future, with its strength affecting both cognition and mental health. Research suggests that neural activity spanning prefrontal, parietal, temporal, and visual areas supports the generation of mental images. Exactly how this network controls the strength of visual imagery remains unknown. Here, brain imaging and transcranial magnetic phosphene data show that lower resting activity and excitability levels in early visual cortex (V1-V3) predict stronger sensory imagery. Electrically decreasing visual cortex excitability using tDCS increases imagery strength, demonstrating a causative role of visual cortex excitability in controlling visual imagery. These data suggest a neurophysiological mechanism of cortical excitability involved in controlling the strength of mental images.
Spike count correlations (SCCs) are ubiquitous in sensory cortices, are characterized by rich structure and arise from structured internal interactions. Yet, most theories of visual perception focus exclusively on the mean responses of individual neurons. Here, we argue that feedback interactions in primary visual cortex (V1) establish the context in which individual neurons process complex stimuli and that changes in visual context give rise to stimulus-dependent SCCs. Measuring V1 population responses to natural scenes in behaving macaques, we show that the fine structure of SCCs is stimulus-specific and variations in response correlations across-stimuli are independent of variations in response means. Moreover, we demonstrate that stimulus-specificity of SCCs in V1 can be directly manipulated by controlling the high-order structure of synthetic stimuli. We propose that stimulus-specificity of SCCs is a natural consequence of hierarchical inference where inferences on the presence of high-level image features modulate inferences on the presence of low-level features.
Natural scene responses in the primary visual cortex are modulated simultaneously by attention and by contextual signals about scene statistics stored across the connectivity of the visual processing hierarchy. We hypothesize that attentional and contextual top-down signals interact in V1, in a manner that primarily benefits the representation of natural visual stimuli, rich in high-order statistical structure. Recording from two macaques engaged in a spatial attention task, we show that attention enhances the decodability of stimulus identity from population responses evoked by natural scenes but, critically, not by synthetic stimuli in which higher-order statistical regularities were eliminated. Attentional enhancement of stimulus decodability from population responses occurs in low dimensional spaces, as revealed by principal component analysis, suggesting an alignment between the attentional and the natural stimulus variance. Moreover, natural scenes produce stimulus-specific oscillatory responses in V1, whose power undergoes a global shift from low to high frequencies with attention. We argue that attention and perception share top-down pathways, which mediate hierarchical interactions optimized for natural vision.
Grasping the meaning of everyday visual events is a fundamental feat of human intelligence that hinges on diverse neural processes ranging from vision to higher-level cognition. Deciphering the neural basis of visual event understanding requires rich, extensive, and appropriately designed experimental data. However, this type of data is hitherto missing. To fill this gap, we introduce the BOLD Moments Dataset (BMD), a large dataset of whole-brain fMRI responses to over 1,000 short (3s) naturalistic video clips and accompanying metadata. We show visual events interface with an array of processes, extending even to memory, and we reveal a match in hierarchical processing between brains and video-computable deep neural networks. Furthermore, we showcase that BMD successfully captures temporal dynamics of visual events at second resolution. BMD thus establishes a critical groundwork for investigations of the neural basis of visual event understanding.
Orientation hypercolumns in the visual cortex are delimited by the repeating pinwheel patterns of orientation selective neurons. We design a generative model for visual cortex maps that reproduces such orientation hypercolumns as well as ocular dominance maps while preserving retinotopy. The model uses a neural placement method based on t–distributed stochastic neighbour embedding (t–SNE) to create maps that order common features in the connectivity matrix of the circuit. We find that, in our model, hypercolumns generally appear with fixed cell numbers independently of the overall network size. These results would suggest that existing differences in absolute pinwheel densities are a consequence of variations in neuronal density. Indeed, available measurements in the visual cortex indicate that pinwheels consist of a constant number of ∼30, 000 neurons. Our model is able to reproduce a large number of characteristic properties known for visual cortex maps. We provide the corresponding software in our MAPStoolbox for Matlab.
Reducing neuronal size results in less cell membrane and therefore lower input conductance. Smaller neurons are thus more excitable as seen in their voltage responses to current injections in the soma. However, the impact of a neuron’s size and shape on its voltage responses to synaptic activation in dendrites is much less understood. Here we use analytical cable theory to predict voltage responses to distributed synaptic inputs and show that these are entirely independent of dendritic length. For a given synaptic density, a neuron’s response depends only on the average dendritic diameter and its intrinsic conductivity. These results remain true for the entire range of possible dendritic morphologies irrespective of any particular arborisation complexity. Also, spiking models result in morphology invariant numbers of action potentials that encode the percentage of active synapses. Interestingly, in contrast to spike rate, spike times do depend on dendrite morphology. In summary, a neuron’s excitability in response to synaptic inputs is not affected by total dendrite length. It rather provides a homeostatic input-output relation that specialised synapse distributions, local non-linearities in the dendrites and synaptic plasticity can modulate. Our work reveals a new fundamental principle of dendritic constancy that has consequences for the overall computation in neural circuits.
Excess neuronal branching allows for innervation of specific dendritic compartments in cortex
(2019)
The connectivity of cortical microcircuits is a major determinant of brain function; defining how activity propagates between different cell types is key to scaling our understanding of individual neuronal behaviour to encompass functional networks. Furthermore, the integration of synaptic currents within a dendrite depends on the spatial organisation of inputs, both excitatory and inhibitory. We identify a simple equation to estimate the number of potential anatomical contacts between neurons; finding a linear increase in potential connectivity with cable length and maximum spine length, and a decrease with overlapping volume. This enables us to predict the mean number of candidate synapses for reconstructed cells, including those realistically arranged. We identify an excess of putative connections in cortical data, with densities of neurite higher than is necessary to reliably ensure the possible implementation of any given connection. We show that potential contacts allow the particular implementation of connectivity at a subcellular level.
The brain adapts to the sensory environment. For example, simple sensory exposure can modify the response properties of early sensory neurons. How these changes affect the overall encoding and maintenance of stimulus information across neuronal populations remains unclear. We perform parallel recordings in the primary visual cortex of anesthetized cats and find that brief, repetitive exposure to structured visual stimuli enhances stimulus encoding by decreasing the selectivity and increasing the range of the neuronal responses that persist after stimulus presentation. Low-dimensional projection methods and simple classifiers demonstrate that visual exposure increases the segregation of persistent neuronal population responses into stimulus-specific clusters. These observed refinements preserve the representational details required for stimulus reconstruction and are detectable in post-exposure spontaneous activity. Assuming response facilitation and recurrent network interactions as the core mechanisms underlying stimulus persistence, we show that the exposure-driven segregation of stimulus responses can arise through strictly local plasticity mechanisms, also in the absence of firing rate changes. Our findings provide evidence for the existence of an automatic, unguided optimization process that enhances the encoding power of neuronal populations in early visual cortex, thus potentially benefiting simple readouts at higher stages of visual processing.
Abstract Trial-to-trial variability and spontaneous activity of cortical recordings have been suggested to reflect intrinsic noise. This view is currently challenged by mounting evidence for structure in these phenomena: Trial-to-trial variability decreases following stimulus onset and can be predicted by previous spontaneous activity. This spontaneous activity is similar in magnitude and structure to evoked activity and can predict decisions. Allof the observed neuronal properties described above can be accounted for, at an abstract computational level, by the sampling-hypothesis, according to which response variability reflects stimulus uncertainty. However, a mechanistic explanation at the level of neural circuit dynamics is still missing.
In this study, we demonstrate that all of these phenomena can be accounted for by a noise-free self-organizing recurrent neural network model (SORN). It combines spike-timing dependent plasticity (STDP) and homeostatic mechanisms in a deterministic network of excitatory and inhibitory McCulloch-Pitts neurons. The network self-organizes to spatio-temporally varying input sequences.
We find that the key properties of neural variability mentioned above develop in this model as the network learns to perform sampling-like inference. Importantly, the model shows high trial-to-trial variability although it is fully deterministic. This suggests that the trial-to-trial variability in neural recordings may not reflect intrinsic noise. Rather, it may reflect a deterministic approximation of sampling-like learning and inference. The simplicity of the model suggests that these correlates of the sampling theory are canonical properties of recurrent networks that learn with a combination of STDP and homeostatic plasticity mechanisms.
Author Summary Neural recordings seem very noisy. If the exact same stimulus is shown to an animal multiple times, the neural response will vary. In fact, the activity of a single neuron shows many features of a stochastic process. Furthermore, in the absence of a sensory stimulus, cortical spontaneous activity has a magnitude comparable to the activity observed during stimulus presentation. These findings have led to a widespread belief that neural activity is indeed very noisy. However, recent evidence indicates that individual neurons can operate very reliably and that the spontaneous activity in the brain is highly structured, suggesting that much of the noise may in fact be signal. One hypothesis regarding this putative signal is that it reflects a form of probabilistic inference through sampling. Here we show that the key features of neural variability can be accounted for in a completely deterministic network model through self-organization. As the network learns a model of its sensory inputs, the deterministic dynamics give rise to sampling-like inference. Our findings show that the notorious variability in neural recordings does not need to be seen as evidence for a noisy brain. Instead it may reflect sampling-like inference emerging from a self-organized learning process.
Background Corticospinal excitability depends on the current brain state. The recent development of real-time EEG-triggered transcranial magnetic stimulation (EEG-TMS) allows studying this relationship in a causal fashion. Specifically, it has been shown that corticospinal excitability is higher during the scalp surface negative EEG peak compared to the positive peak of µ-oscillations in sensorimotor cortex, as indexed by larger motor evoked potentials (MEPs) for fixed stimulation intensity.
Objective We further characterize the effect of µ-rhythm phase on the MEP input-output (IO) curve by measuring the degree of excitability modulation across a range of stimulation intensities. We furthermore seek to optimize stimulation parameters to enable discrimination of functionally relevant EEG-defined brain states.
Methods A real-time EEG-TMS system was used to trigger MEPs during instantaneous brain-states corresponding to µ-rhythm surface positive and negative peaks with five different stimulation intensities covering an individually calibrated MEP IO curve in 15 healthy participants.
Results MEP amplitude is modulated by µ-phase across a wide range of stimulation intensities, with larger MEPs at the surface negative peak. The largest relative MEP-modulation was observed for weak intensities, the largest absolute MEP-modulation for intermediate intensities. These results indicate a leftward shift of the MEP IO curve during the µ-rhythm negative peak.
Conclusion The choice of stimulation intensity influences the observed degree of corticospinal excitability modulation by µ-phase. Lower stimulation intensities enable more efficient differentiation of EEG µ-phase-defined brain states.
Active efficient coding explains the development of binocular vision and its failure in amblyopia
(2020)
The development of vision during the first months of life is an active process that comprises the learning of appropriate neural representations and the learning of accurate eye movements. While it has long been suspected that the two learning processes are coupled, there is still no widely accepted theoretical framework describing this joint development. Here we propose a computational model of the development of active binocular vision to fill this gap. The model is based on a new formulation of the Active Efficient Coding theory, which proposes that eye movements, as well as stimulus encoding, are jointly adapted to maximize the overall coding efficiency. Under healthy conditions, the model self-calibrates to perform accurate vergence and accommodation eye movements. It exploits disparity cues to deduce the direction of defocus, which leads to co-ordinated vergence and accommodation responses. In a simulated anisometropic case, where the refraction power of the two eyes differs, an amblyopia-like state develops, in which the foveal region of one eye is suppressed due to inputs from the other eye. After correcting for refractive errors, the model can only reach healthy performance levels if receptive fields are still plastic, in line with findings on a critical period for binocular vision development. Overall, our model offers a unifying conceptual framework for understanding the development of binocular vision.
Spatial attention increases both inter-areal synchronization and spike rates across the visual hierarchy. To investigate whether these attentional changes reflect distinct or common mechanisms, we performed simultaneous laminar recordings of identified cell classes in macaque V1 and V4. Enhanced V4 spike rates were expressed by both excitatory neurons and fast-spiking interneurons, and were most prominent and arose earliest in time in superficial layers, consistent with a feedback modulation. By contrast, V1-V4 gamma-synchronization reflected feedforward communication and surprisingly engaged only fast-spiking interneurons in the V4 input layer. In mouse visual cortex, we found a similar motif for optogenetically identified inhibitory-interneuron classes. Population decoding analyses further indicate that feedback-related increases in spikes rates encoded attention more reliably than feedforward-related increases in synchronization. These findings reveal distinct, cell-type-specific feedforward and feedback pathways for the attentional modulation of inter-areal synchronization and spike rates, respectively.
Developmental loss of ErbB4 in PV interneurons disrupts state-dependent cortical circuit dynamics
(2020)
GABAergic inhibition plays an important role in the establishment and maintenance of cortical circuits during development. Neuregulin 1 (Nrg1) and its interneuron-specific receptor ErbB4 are key elements of a signaling pathway critical for the maturation and proper synaptic connectivity of interneurons. Using conditional deletions of the ERBB4 gene in mice, we tested the role of this signaling pathway at two developmental timepoints in parvalbumin-expressing (PV) interneurons, the largest subpopulation of cortical GABAergic cells. Loss of ErbB4 in PV interneurons during embryonic, but not late postnatal, development leads to alterations in the activity of excitatory and inhibitory cortical neurons, along with severe disruption of cortical temporal organization. These impairments emerge by the end of the second postnatal week, prior to the complete maturation of the PV interneurons themselves. Early loss of ErbB4 in PV interneurons also results in profound dysregulation of excitatory pyramidal neuron dendritic architecture and a redistribution of spine density at the apical dendritic tuft. In association with these deficits, excitatory cortical neurons exhibit normal tuning for sensory inputs, but a loss of state-dependent modulation of the gain of sensory responses. Together these data support a key role for early developmental Nrg1/ErbB4 signaling in PV interneurons as powerful mechanism underlying the maturation of both the inhibitory and excitatory components of cortical circuits.
An important question concerning inter-areal communication in the cortex is whether these interactions are synergistic, i.e. convey information beyond what can be performed by isolated signals. Here, we dissociated cortical interactions sharing common information from those encoding complementary information during prediction error processing. To this end, we computed co-information, an information-theoretical measure that distinguishes redundant from synergistic information among brain signals. We analyzed auditory and frontal electrocorticography (ECoG) signals in three common awake marmosets and investigated to what extent event-related-potentials (ERP) and broadband (BB) dynamics exhibit redundancy and synergy for auditory prediction error signals. We observed multiple patterns of redundancy and synergy across the entire cortical hierarchy with distinct dynamics. The information conveyed by ERPs and BB signals was highly synergistic even at lower stages of the hierarchy in the auditory cortex, as well as between lower and higher areas in the frontal cortex. These results indicate that the distributed representations of prediction error signals across the cortical hierarchy can be highly synergistic.
SpikeShip: a method for fast, unsupervised discovery of high-dimensional neural spiking patterns
(2023)
Neural coding and memory formation depend on temporal spiking sequences that span high-dimensional neural ensembles. The unsupervised discovery and characterization of these spiking sequences requires a suitable dissimilarity measure to spiking patterns, which can then be used for clustering and decoding. Here, we present a new dissimilarity measure based on optimal transport theory called SpikeShip, which compares multi-neuron spiking patterns based on all the relative spike-timing relationships among neurons. SpikeShip computes the optimal transport cost to make all the relative spike timing relationships (across neurons) identical between two spiking patterns. We show that this transport cost can be decomposed into a temporal rigid translation term, which captures global latency shifts, and a vector of neuron-specific transport flows, which reflect inter-neuronal spike timing differences. SpikeShip can be effectively computed for high-dimensional neuronal ensembles, has a low (linear) computational cost that has the same order as the spike count, and is sensitive to higher-order correlations. Furthermore SpikeShip is binless, can handle any form of spike time distributions, is not affected by firing rate fluctuations, can detect patterns with a low signal-to-noise ratio, and can be effectively combined with a sliding window approach. We compare the advantages and differences between SpikeShip and other measures like SPIKE and Victor-P urpura distance. We applied SpikeShip to large-scale Neuropixel recordings during spontaneous activity and visual encoding. We show that high-dimensional spiking sequences detected via SpikeShip reliably distinguish between different natural images and different behavioral states. These spiking sequences carried complementary information to conventional firing rate codes. SpikeShip opens new avenues for studying neural coding and memory consolidation by rapid and unsupervised detection of temporal spiking patterns in high-dimensional neural ensembles.
The hippocampal formation is linked to spatial navigation, but there is little corroboration from freely-moving primates with concurrent monitoring of three-dimensional head and gaze stances. We recorded neurons and local field potentials across hippocampal regions in rhesus macaques during free foraging in an open environment while tracking their head and eye. Theta band activity was intermittently present at movement onset and modulated by saccades. Many cells were phase-locked to theta, with few showing theta phase precession. Most hippocampal neurons encoded a mixture of spatial variables beyond place fields and a negligible number showed prominent grid tuning. Spatial representations were dominated by facing location and allocentric direction, mostly in head, rather than gaze, coordinates. Importantly, eye movements strongly modulated neural activity in all regions. These findings reveal that the macaque hippocampal formation represents three-dimensional space using a multiplexed code, with head orientation and eye movement properties dominating over simple place and grid coding during free exploration.
Path integration is a sensorimotor computation that can be used to infer latent dynamical states by integrating self-motion cues. We studied the influence of sensory observation (visual/vestibular) and latent control dynamics (velocity/acceleration) on human path integration using a novel motion-cueing algorithm. Sensory modality and control dynamics were both varied randomly across trials, as participants controlled a joystick to steer to a memorized target location in virtual reality. Visual and vestibular steering cues allowed comparable accuracies only when participants controlled their acceleration, suggesting that vestibular signals, on their own, fail to support accurate path integration in the absence of sustained acceleration. Nevertheless, performance in all conditions reflected a failure to fully adapt to changes in the underlying control dynamics, a result that was well explained by a bias in the dynamics estimation. This work demonstrates how an incorrect internal model of control dynamics affects navigation in volatile environments in spite of continuous sensory feedback.
Neuroscience studies in non-human primates (NHP) often follow the rule of thumb that results observed in one animal must be replicated in at least one other. However, we lack a statistical justification for this rule of thumb, or an analysis of whether including three or more animals is better than including two. Yet, a formal statistical framework for experiments with few subjects would be crucial for experimental design, ethical justification, and data analysis. Also, including three or four animals in a study creates the possibility that the results observed in one animal will differ from those observed in the others: we need a statistically justified rule to resolve such situations. Here, I present a statistical framework to address these issues. This framework assumes that conducting an experiment will produce a similar result for a large proportion of the population (termed ‘representative’), but will produce spurious results for a substantial proportion of animals (termed ‘outliers’); the fractions of ‘representative’ and ‘outliers’ animals being defined by a prior distribution. I propose a procedure in which experimenters collect results from M animals and accept results that are observed in at least N of them (‘N-out-of-M’ procedure). I show how to compute the risks α (of reaching an incorrect conclusion) and β (of failing to reach a conclusion) for any prior distribution, and as a function of N and M. Strikingly, I find that the N-out-of-M model leads to a similar conclusion across a wide range of prior distributions: recordings from two animals lowers the risk α and therefore ensures reliable result, but leaves a large risk β; and recordings from three animals and accepting results observed in two of them strikes an efficient balance between acceptable risks α and β. This framework gives a formal justification for the rule of thumb of using at least two animals in NHP studies, suggests that recording from three animals when possible markedly improves statistical power, provides a statistical solution for situations where results are not consistent between all animals, and may apply to other types of studies involving few animals.
The neural mechanisms that unfold when humans form a large group defined by an overarching context, such as audiences in theater or sports, are largely unknown and unexplored. This is mainly due to the lack of availability of a scalable system that can record the brain activity from a significantly large portion of such an audience simultaneously. Although the technology for such a system has been readily available for a long time, the high cost as well as the large overhead in human resources and logistic planning have prohibited the development of such a system. However, during the recent years reduction in technology costs and size have led to the emergence of low-cost, consumer-oriented EEG systems, developed primarily for recreational use. Here by combining such a low-cost EEG system with other off-the-shelve hardware and tailor-made software, we develop in the lab and test in a cinema such a scalable EEG hyper-scanning system. The system has a robust and stable performance and achieves accurate unambiguous alignment of the recorded data of the different EEG headsets. These characteristics combined with small preparation time and low-cost make it an ideal candidate for recording large portions of audiences.
Research on psychopathy has so far been largely limited to the investigation of high-level processes, such as emotion perception and regulation. In the present work, we investigate whether psychopathy has an effect on the estimation of fundamental physical parameters, which are computed in the brain during early stages of sensory processing. We employed a simple task in which participants had to estimate their interpersonal distance from a moving avatar and stop it at a given distance. The face expression of the avatars were positive, negative, or neutral. Participants carried out the task online on their home computers. We measured the psychopathy level via a self-report questionnaire. Regardless of the degree of psychopathy, the facial expression of the avatars showed no effect on distance estimation. Our results show that individuals with a high degree of psychopathy underestimate distance of approaching avatars significantly less (let the avatar approach them significantly closer) than did participants with a lesser degree of psychopathy. Moreover, participants who scored high in Self-Centered Impulsivity underestimate the distance to approaching avatars significantly less (let the avatar approach closer) than participants with a low score. Distance estimation is considered an automatic process performed at early stages of visual processing. Therefore, our results imply that psychopathy affects basic early sensory processes, such as feature extraction, in the visual cortex.
Moving in synchrony to external rhythmic stimuli is an elementary function that humans regularly engage in. It is termed “sensorimotor synchronization” and it is governed by two main parameters, the period and the phase of the movement with respect to the external rhythm. There has been an extensive body of research on the characteristics of these parameters, primarily once the movement synchronization has reached a steady-state level. Particular interest has been shown about how these parameters are corrected when there are deviations for the steady-state level. However, little is known about the initial “tuning-in” interval, when one aligns the movement to the external rhythm from rest. The current work investigates this “tuning-in” period for each of the four limbs and makes various novel contributions in the understanding of sensorimotor synchronization. The results suggest that phase and period alignment appear to be separate processes. Phase alignment involves limb-specific somatosensory memory in the order of minutes while period alignment has very limited memory usage. Phase alignment is the primary task but then the brain switches to period alignment where it spends most its resources. In overall this work suggests a central, cognitive role of period alignment and a peripheral, sensorimotor role of phase alignment.
Temporal anticipation is a fundamental process underlying complex neural functions such as associative learning, decision-making, and motor-preparation. Here we study event anticipation in its simplest form in human participants using magnetoencephalography. We distributed events in time according to different probability density functions and presented the stimuli separately in two different sensory modalities. We found that the temporal dynamics in right parietal cortex correlate with reaction times to anticipated events. Specifically, after an event occurred, event probability was represented in right parietal activity, hinting at a functional role of event-related potential component P300 in temporal expectancy. The results are consistent across both visual and auditory modalities. The right parietal cortex seems to play a central role in the processing of event probability density. Overall, this work contributes to the understanding of the neural processes involved in the anticipation of events in time.
Models of perceptual decision making have historically been designed to maximally explain behaviour and brain activity independently of their ability to actually perform tasks. More recently, performance-optimized models have been shown to correlate with brain responses to images and thus present a complementary approach to understand perceptual processes. In the present study, we compare how these approaches comparatively account for the spatio-temporal organization of neural responses elicited by ambiguous visual stimuli. Forty-six healthy human subjects performed perceptual decisions on briefly flashed stimuli constructed from ambiguous characters. The stimuli were designed to have 7 orthogonal properties, ranging from low-sensory levels (e.g. spatial location of the stimulus) to conceptual (whether stimulus is a letter or a digit) and task levels (i.e. required hand movement). Magneto-encephalography source and decoding analyses revealed that these 7 levels of representations are sequentially encoded by the cortical hierarchy, and actively maintained until the subject responds. This hierarchy appeared poorly correlated to normative, drift-diffusion, and 5-layer convolutional neural networks (CNN) optimized to accurately categorize alpha-numeric characters, but partially matched the sequence of activations of 3/6 state-of-the-art CNNs trained for natural image labeling (VGG-16, VGG-19, MobileNet). Additionally, we identify several systematic discrepancies between these CNNs and brain activity, revealing the importance of single-trial learning and recurrent processing. Overall, our results strengthen the notion that performance-optimized algorithms can converge towards the computational solution implemented by the human visual system, and open possible avenues to improve artificial perceptual decision making.
Viewpoint effects on object recognition interact with object-scene consistency effects. While recognition of objects seen from “accidental” viewpoints (e.g., a cup from below) is typically impeded compared to processing of objects seen from canonical viewpoints (e.g., the string-side of a guitar), this effect is reduced by meaningful scene context information. In the present study we investigated if these findings established by using photographic images, generalise to 3D models of objects. Using 3D models further allowed us to probe a broad range of viewpoints and empirically establish accidental and canonical viewpoints. In Experiment 1, we presented 3D models of objects from six different viewpoints (0°, 60°, 120°, 180° 240°, 300°) in colour (1a) and grayscaled (1b) in a sequential matching task. Viewpoint had a significant effect on accuracy and response times. Based on the performance in Experiments 1a and 1b, we determined canonical (0°-rotation) and non-canonical (120°-rotation) viewpoints for the stimuli. In Experiment 2, participants again performed a sequential matching task, however now the objects were paired with scene backgrounds which could be either consistent (e.g., a cup in the kitchen) or inconsistent (e.g., a guitar in the bathroom) to the object. Viewpoint interacted significantly with scene consistency in that object recognition was less affected by viewpoint when consistent scene information was provided, compared to inconsistent information. Our results show that viewpoint-dependence and scene context effects generalize to depth rotated 3D objects. This supports the important role object-scene processing plays for object constancy.
We tested 6–7-year-olds, 18–22-year-olds, and 67–74-year-olds on an associative memory task that consisted of knowledge-congruent and knowledge-incongruent object–scene pairs that were highly familiar to all age groups. We compared the three age groups on their memory congruency effect (i.e., better memory for knowledge-congruent associations) and on a schema bias score, which measures the participants’ tendency to commit knowledge-congruent memory errors. We found that prior knowledge similarly benefited memory for items encoded in a congruent context in all age groups. However, for associative memory, older adults and, to a lesser extent, children overrelied on their prior knowledge, as indicated by both an enhanced congruency effect and schema bias. Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) performed during memory encoding revealed an age-independent memory x congruency interaction in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC). Furthermore, the magnitude of vmPFC recruitment correlated positively with the schema bias. These findings suggest that older adults are most prone to rely on their prior knowledge for episodic memory decisions, but that children can also rely heavily on prior knowledge that they are well acquainted with. Furthermore, the fMRI results suggest that the vmPFC plays a key role in the assimilation of new information into existing knowledge structures across the entire lifespan. vmPFC recruitment leads to better memory for knowledge-congruent information but also to a heightened susceptibility to commit knowledge-congruent memory errors, in particular in children and older adults.
Within the last year, expressions of second-hand embarrassment on Twitter significantly increased. We show how this relates to the current situation in U.S. politics under Trump and provide two explanations for why people feel this way in response to his actions. First, compared to former politicians, Trump’s norm violations seem intentional. Second, intentional norm violations specifically threaten the social integrity of in-group members—in this case, U.S citizens. We theorize that these strong, frequent and widespread feelings of second-hand embarrassment motivate political actions to prevent further harm to individuals’ self-concept and protect their social integrity.
Während der wissenschaftliche Nachwuchs im Forschungsbereich strategisch und wissenschaftlich fundiert samt diversen Prüfungen (Bachelor, Master, Promotion, ggf. auch Habilitation) ausgebildet wird, existiert im Bereich der Lehre nichts auch nur annährend Vergleichbares. Die übliche „Qualifizierung“ des Nachwuchslehrenden findet meist nur „On-the-job“ (vgl. Conradi, 1983) statt, d.h. durch eigenes Ausprobieren nach Beobachtung anderer Lehrender während des eigenen Studiums. Unter guten Bedingungen hat der Lehrende vorab oder begleitend Weiterbildungen zu guter Lehre besucht. Eine strategische Einbettung dieser Personalentwicklungsmaßnahmen, wie es seitens der Forschung intendiert wird, ist nicht vorhanden. Dieser Beitrag stellt mögliche Formen vor und führt exemplarisch eine darunter näher aus.
Hochschuldidaktische Weiterbildungsveranstaltungen haben häufig nur eine geringe Akzeptanz bei etablierten Hochschullehrenden. Es wird angenommen, dass der Nachweis wissenschaftlicher Evidenz hochschuldidaktischer Maßnahmen deren Akzeptanz in Hochschulen erhöht. Zur Verknüpfung von empirischer Forschung und hochschuldidaktischen Weiterbildungen schlagen wir ein Spiralmodell vor. Praktisch werden ausgehend von theoretischen und empirischen Grundlagen relevante Ergebnisse für die Bearbeitung in hochschuldidaktischen Weiterbildungen entwickelt. Die Anwendung des Spiralmodells wird an einem Praxisbeispiel zum Themenfeld "Interkulturelle Kommunikation in der Hochschule" illustriert.
Die Internationalisierung der deutschen Hochschulen nahm in den letzten Jahren stark zu. Umgang mit Studierenden aus unterschiedlichen Kulturen bedeutet für Lehrende längst Alltag. Nicht immer jedoch verläuft die Kommunikation zwischen Angehörigen unterschiedlicher Kulturen reibungslos. Um möglichen Schwierigkeiten entgegenzuwirken, setzen einige Universitäten interkulturelle Trainings ein zur Sensibilisierung für interkulturelle Unterschiede. Die Autoren haben im Rahmen eines hochschuldidaktischen Weiterbildungsprogramms für Lehrende ein interkulturelles Training entwickelt und eingesetzt. Über den Aufbau und die Ziele des Trainings wird im vorliegenden Artikel berichtet. Weiterhin wird ein Untersuchungsdesign vorgestellt, mit welchem der Einfluss von Kultur auf die Online-Kommunikation in der Lehre untersucht wurde.
Im Rahmen des Bund-Länder-Programms "Qualitätspakt Lehre" hat die Goethe-Universität Frankfurt erfolgreich das Programm "Starker Start ins Studium" eingeworben. Dadurch verfügt das Institut für Psychologie nun über die personellen Möglichkeiten, die fachliche und soziale Integration neuer Psychologiestudierender im sechssemestrigen Bachelorstudiengang Psychologie zu verbessern. Hierzu wurden zwei obligate je zweisemestrige Lehrmodule entwickelt. In dem vorliegenden Beitrag wird das übergeordnete Lehrkonzept beschrieben und dessen Implementierung im Fach Psychologie als Praxisbeispiel illustriert.
Verständnisvolle Dozenten haben weniger Fachwissen : Wirkungen der sprachlichen Anpassung an Laien
(2012)
In der Interaktion mit Studierenden ist schriftliche Online-Kommunikation ein wichtiges Arbeitsmedium für jeden Lehrenden geworden. Die Interaktionspartner haben dabei für ihre Urteilsbildung über den jeweils anderen ausschließlich den geschriebenen Text mit seinen lexikalen und grammatikalischen Merkmalen zur Verfügung. Das Ausmaß der lexikalen Anpassung an die Wortwahl eines Studierenden kann daher einen Einfluss auf die studentische Bewertung ihrer Dozenten hinsichtlich unterschiedlicher Persönlichkeitseigenschaften haben. In der vorliegenden Studie beurteilten Studierende jeweils zwei Dozenten hinsichtlich Verständnis, Gewissenhaftigkeit und Intellekt (IPIP, Goldberg, Johnson, Eber et al., 2006) auf Grundlage einer Emailkommunikation. Der Grad der lexikalen Anpassung der Lehrenden wurde dabei variiert. Es zeigte sich, dass Studierende Dozenten mit umgangssprachlicher Wortwahl als verständnisvoller, gewissenhafter aber tendenziell weniger wissend einschätzen.
In diesem Beitrag werden Ansätze zur Förderung der Eignungsreflexion der Studierenden im Lehramt sowie der Beratungskompetenz der betreuenden Lehrenden an der Goethe-Universität Frankfurt dargestellt: Für die Studierenden wurden unterschiedliche Maßnahmen entwickelt und implementiert, die die Reflexion über die persönliche Eignung für den Lehrerberuf fördern und bestehende Defizite frühzeitig ausgleichen helfen. Für die betreuenden Lehrenden (an Universität und Schule) wurde eine hochschuldidaktische Weiterbildung entwickelt und eingesetzt, welche deren Beratungskompetenz stärken soll.
We propose a framework of individual problem-solving and communicative demands (IproCo) that bridges the gap between models from cognitive psychology and communication pragmatics. Furthermore, we present two experiments conducted to identify factors influencing the demands and to test possibilities for support. The experiments employed a remote collaborative picture-sorting task with concrete and abstract pictures and applied non-interactive conditions compared to interactive conditions. In a first experiment, the influence of the postulated demands on collaboration process and outcome was analysed, and the impact of shared applications was tested. In a second experiment, we evaluated instructional support measures consisting of model collaboration and a collaboration script. The collaboration process showed benefits of the support but the outcome did not. However, the support measures fostered the collaboration process even in the particularly difficult conditions with non-interactive communication. We discuss the impact of the IproCo framework and apply it to other tasks.
Effective knowledge communication presupposes common ground (Clark & Brennan, 1991) that needs to be established and maintained. This is particularly difficult in remote communication as well as in non-interactive settings, because the speaker cannot use gestures or mimic and has to tailor his utterances to the addressee without receiving feedback. In these situations, the speaker may achieve mutual understanding for example by adopting the addressee’s perspective. We present a study conducted to test the impact of instructions that support and hinder individual problem solving and knowledge communication. We used a picture-sorting task requiring individual cognitive processes of feature search (Treisman & Gelade, 1980) in addition to referential communication. As our study focused on the design of utterances, all participants assumed the role of speaker. Participants were told that their descriptions would be recorded and then listened to later on by a participant in the role of addressee. Eight sets of pictures were used, which varied on two dimensions: the individual cognitive demands of detecting the relevant features (varied as between-subject factor) and the communicative demands (varied as within-subject factor). A further between-subject factor was the type of instructions: The participants received either a collaboration script as supporting instructions, or time pressure was applied to induce stress, or else they were given no additional instructions (control group). We used the speakers’ verbal utterances to examine the quality of the speakers’ descriptions. For both dimensions of difficulty, we found the expected effects. In the conditions with a collaboration script, there were fewer irrelevant features mentioned and fewer features were described with delay. In the conditions with time pressure, there were fewer irrelevant features described, but the number of correctly described pictures was impaired through the fact that relevant features were also neglected. Under time pressure, speakers tended to provide ambiguous descriptions regarding the frame of reference.
Klugheit wird gemeinhin als das Gegenteil von Torheit aufgefasst. Auf diese Weise erfährt sie eine sprachlich vorstrukturierte positive Bewertung und erhält einen ausgezeichneten gesellschaftlichen Status. "Positiv" bedeutet eine Verknüpfung mit spezifischen je gesellschaftlich richtigen Wertmassstäben, die aber in unterschiedlichen Milieus und Regionen durchaus verschieden ausfallen. Diese bilden den impliziten Subtext für die alltägliche Zuschreibung von "Klugheit". Klugheit fokussiert das Verhalten der Menschen, die Handlungen, die Performanz. Klugheit wird denjenigen Personen zugeschrieben, die "das Richtige" tun, und nachdem sie das Richtige getan haben, etabliert sich erst das Kriterium für die Richtigkeit dieser Beurteilung: der Ausgang der Geschichte. Klugheit wird zwar im vornhinein behauptet, stellt sich aber erst im Nachhinein heraus: denn sie misst sich nicht an der vorgeführten Handlung selbst, sondern am Ausgang der "Geschichte". Eine Bauerntochter handelt dann klug, wenn ihre Handlungen zu einem – im Sinne des Erzählers – guten Ende führen, zu einem Happy-End sozusagen. ...