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Scaffolding of Brain Operations
Sponsor: New York State Psychiatric Institute
Summary
Brain activity will be recorded while participants rest and/or perform perceptual discrimination tasks. These tasks include the presentation of sensory stimuli and require participants to detect and discriminate these stimuli, and to report about the objective properties of the stimuli as well as about their subjective perceptual experience using ratings of confidence, visibility, and/or alertness/sleepiness. All sensory stimuli used are neutral and consist of visual stimuli presented on a computer screen (either basic visual stimuli, e.g. an arrow, a grating or a dot, or neutral pictures of e.g. objects, buildings, landscapes), or auditory stimuli presented via headphones (either basic sounds, e.g. a beep or noise, or more complex sounds, e.g. a spoken word or rhythm). The experimental tasks may require participants to compare between sensory stimuli presented at different spatial locations or at different times, and/or to focus their attention on specific stimuli while suppressing distracting information; additionally, tasks may require participants to remember these stimuli for a delayed report. In these tasks, participants' performance will be quantified by motor responses (i.e., button press), reaction times and subjective ratings (confidence, visibility, alertness/sleepiness). Brain activity will be recorded by means of electroencephalography (EEG), a non-invasive technique consisting of electrodes placed along the scalp that record electrical field potentials generated by cortical neurons. EEG will be used to record brain activity prior to and in response to the sensory stimuli presented during the cognitive and perceptual tasks as well as during the participants' responses. Additionally, EEG may be used to record brain activity during a baseline resting state, while participants are not engaged in any particular tasks. In particular, the analysis of the EEG signal will focus on event-related brain activity (i.e., in response to the stimuli) such as event-related potentials (ERP), as well as ongoing and spontaneous and/or induced brain activity quantified as oscillations: wave-like signal fluctuations reflecting rhythmic variations of membrane potentials of cortical neurons. In addition, the investigators will use MRI to take an anatomical image of the brain to facilitate localizing the sources of the activity measured with EEG.
Official title: Scaffolding of Brain Operations: the Role of Beta Oscillations in Forming Flexible Neural Ensembles
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 50 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
170
Start Date
2022-04-10
Completion Date
2027-06
Last Updated
2026-05-26
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
discrimination task
Participants perform a discrimination task while their brain activity is recorded with EEG. Beta power will be estimated using spectral decomposition techniques, zooming in on subject specific bands in temporospatial windows of interest, and correlated with (1) WM content, (2) decision outcome, and (3) behavioral performance (i.e., accuracy and RT).
Locations (1)
New York State Psychiatric Institute
New York, New York, United States