›› 2020, Vol. 43 ›› Issue (1): 23-32.

• 基础、实验与工效 • 上一篇    下一篇

前额叶神经振荡活动反映了稳固的刺激冲突和反应冲突

唐丹丹1,陈安涛2,李红3,朱海1   

  1. 1. 遵义师范学院
    2. 教育部;西南大学
    3. 深圳大学心理与社会学院
  • 收稿日期:2018-11-14 修回日期:2019-06-19 出版日期:2020-01-15 发布日期:2020-01-20
  • 通讯作者: 朱海
  • 基金资助:
    基于大数据的认知控制的神经机制研究及教学实践应用

Frontal oscillatory activities reflect stable stimulus and response conflicts

Dan-Dan TANG1,An-Tao CHEN2,Hong LIHai ZHu4   

  • Received:2018-11-14 Revised:2019-06-19 Online:2020-01-15 Published:2020-01-20
  • Contact: Hai ZHu

摘要: 为考察典型Flanker任务中练习对刺激冲突和反应冲突的影响,本研究采用练习范式记录被试完成2:1字母Flanker任务时的行为和脑电数据。行为结果发现,练习对这两类冲突无显著影响。神经震荡能量结果发现,前额叶theta能量随练习而显著减弱,这暗示刺激-反应之间的联结因练习而提升;前额叶alpha能量差异不随练习而变化,这可能反映了Flanker任务中稳定的刺激冲突和反应冲突加工机制。因此,本研究揭示了典型Flanker任务中刺激冲突和反应冲突的稳定特征。

关键词: 脑电, 前额叶, 神经振荡, 刺激冲突, 反应冲突

Abstract: Cumulative evidence suggests that practice has significantly dissociable influences on stimulus and response conflicts in the congruency tasks (such as the Stroop and Flanker tasks). However, the effects of practice on stimulus and response conflicts in a typical Flanker task are unclear. To address this question, in the present study, behavioral and electroencephalography (EEG) data were recorded from twenty-nine healthy human participants while they were performing a 2:1 (two targets are mapped into one response key) letter Flanker task in a practice design. The stimuli consisted of capital letters (‘N’, ‘H’, ‘K’, and ‘F’). In each trial, five horizontal-arranged capital letters were presented in Times New Roman font with a central target letter flanked by two distractor letters on each side. The participants were instructed to respond to the central target letter (1) ‘N’ or ‘H’ by pressing the “2” key with the left forefinger and (2) ‘K’ or ‘F’ by pressing the “9” key with the right forefinger. Participants performed a block of sixteen trials prior to the completion of seven experimental blocks. In the experimental blocks, the first and last served as the pre- and post-practice blocks consisting of 192 trials each; the practice stage consisted of 1200 trials separated into 5 blocks of 240 trials each. To reveal the practice-related behavioral and spectral characteristics, behavioral and EEG analyses only focused on the response time (RT), error rates, and oscillatory magnitudes in pre- and post-practice blocks. Modulations of EEG activities in the time-frequency domain were represented as an event-related spectral perturbation (ERSP) that was estimated using a continuous wavelet transform (CWT). To distinguish between phase-locked and non-phase-locked EEG responses, the phase-locking value (PLV) was respectively calculated in pre- and post-practice stages, for each trial type of each participant. Based on the previous investigations, we will test the hypotheses that (1) the effects of practice on RT in the letter Flanker task may be different from those in the Stroop and color-word Flanker tasks, and (2) practice may affect the frontal theta and alpha activities. The results show that RT significantly reduced with practice; however, stimulus and response conflicts did not vary after practice. It is likely that practice enhanced the links between stimuli and responses for each trial type in the same way and, therefore, shortened RT to the same degree for each trial type, and did not affect stimulus and response conflicts. Brain oscillatory results are consistent with the RT patterns and showed that (1) the frontal theta (4–7 Hz, 0.52–0.82 s) activity significantly declined for each trial type after practice, which suggests the enhanced links between stimuli and responses after practice, and (2) the frontal alpha (8–11 Hz, 0.52–0.82 s) activity was constant for both stimulus and response conflicts with practice, suggesting a stable mechanism of stimulus and response conflict processes in the letter Flanker task. Therefore, we speculate that the pattern of theta activity may reflect the task characteristics, and that the modulations of the alpha magnitudes may reflect an innate mechanism of stimulus- and response-conflicts, which is task-specific and, therefore, does not be affected by the vast practice. Altogether, these findings demonstrate stable behavioral and neural oscillatory characteristics of stimulus and response conflicts in a typical Flanker task.

Key words: electroencephalography (EEG), frontal, neural oscillations, stimulus conflict, response conflict