Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4323853 Brain Research 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Task difficulty changes the neural synchronies during target/nontarget processing.•The change is dissociated between target and nontarget processing.•Large-scale neural synchrony is more relevant for difficulty-related changes.•The synchronized patterns differ between target and nontarget processing.•The patterns are in agreement with top-down and bottom-up attentional networks.

The major purpose of this study was to explore the changes in the local/global gamma-band neural synchronies during target/non-target processing due to task difficulty under an auditory three-stimulus oddball paradigm. Multichannel event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from fifteen healthy participants during the oddball task. In addition to the conventional ERP analysis, we investigated the modulations in gamma-band activity (GBA) and inter-regional gamma-band phase synchrony (GBPS) for infrequent target and non-target processing due to task difficulty. The most notable finding was that the difficulty-related changes in inter-regional GBPS (33–35 Hz) at P300 epoch (350–600 ms) completely differed for target and non-target processing. As task difficulty increased, the GBPS significantly reduced for target processing but increased for non-target processing. This result contrasts with the local neural synchrony in gamma-bands, which was not affected by task difficulty. Another major finding was that the spatial patterns of functional connectivity were dissociated for target and non-target processing with regard to the difficult task. The spatial pattern for target processing was compatible with the top-down attention network, whereas that for the non-target corresponded to the bottom-up attention network. Overall, we found that the inter-regional gamma-band neural synchronies during target/non-target processing change significantly with task difficulty and that this change is dissociated between target and non-target processing. Our results indicate that large-scale neural synchrony is more relevant for the difference in information processing between target and non-target stimuli.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Neuroscience (General)
Authors
, , , , ,