Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8957336 | NeuroImage | 2018 | 40 Pages |
Abstract
Decoding accuracy related to a numerically small, but reliable univariate difference in the mean BOLD response to preferred and non-preferred stimuli. The time course of the difference in BOLD responses to preferred and non-preferred orientations was highly similar to the time course of the multivariate pattern classification accuracy. The reliability of the classification strongly correlated with the magnitude of differences in BOLD signal between preferred and non-preferred stimuli. These activity differences were small compared to the large overall BOLD modulations. This suggests that a substantial part of the task-related BOLD response to visual stimulation might not be stimulus-specific. Rather, stimulus-evoked BOLD signals in early visual cortex during a task context may be an amalgam of small stimulus-specific responses and large task-related but non-stimulus-specific responses. The latter are not evident during the maintenance or internal generation of stimulus representations, but provide an explanation of how reliable stimulus information can be decoded from early visual cortex even though its overall BOLD signal remains low.
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Authors
Anke Marit Albers, Thomas Meindertsma, Ivan Toni, Floris P. de Lange,