Brain Mechanisms Underlying the Brief Maintenance of Seen and Unseen Sensory Information

Adult Male 0301 basic medicine Unconscious, Psychology Models, Neurological Brain Magnetoencephalography Awareness Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences Memory, Short-Term Visual Perception Humans Female Psychological Theory Perceptual Masking
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuron.2016.10.051 Publication Date: 2016-12-07T17:53:43Z
ABSTRACT
Recent evidence of unconscious working memory challenges the notion that only visible stimuli can be actively maintained over time. In the present study, we investigated the neural dynamics underlying the maintenance of variably visible stimuli using magnetoencephalography. Subjects had to detect and mentally maintain the orientation of a masked grating. We show that the stimulus is fully encoded in early brain activity independently of visibility reports. However, the presence and orientation of the target are actively maintained throughout the brief retention period, even when the stimulus is reported as unseen. Source and decoding analyses revealed that perceptual maintenance recruits a hierarchical network spanning the early visual, temporal, parietal, and frontal cortices. Importantly, the representations coded in the late processing stages of this network specifically predicted visibility reports. These unexpected results challenge several theories of consciousness and suggest that invisible information can be briefly maintained within the higher processing stages of visual perception.
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