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The thalamocortical inhibitory network controls human conscious perceptionopen access

Authors
Seo, J.Kim, D.-J.Choi, S.-H.Kim, H.Min, B.-K.
Issue Date
2022
Publisher
Academic Press Inc.
Keywords
Conscious perception; Default-mode network; Illusory colour; Thalamic reticular nucleus; Thalamocortical inhibitory network
Citation
NeuroImage, v.264
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NeuroImage
Volume
264
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/146973
DOI
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119748
ISSN
1053-8119
Abstract
Although conscious perception is a fundamental cognitive function, its neural correlates remain unclear. It remains debatable whether thalamocortical interactions play a decisive role in conscious perception. To clarify this, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) where flickering red and green visual cues could be perceived either as a non-fused colour or fused colour. Here we show significantly differentiated fMRI neurodynamics only in higher-order thalamocortical regions, compared with first-order thalamocortical regions. Anticorrelated neurodynamic behaviours were observed between the visual stream network and default-mode network. Its dynamic causal modelling consistently provided compelling evidence for the involvement of higher-order thalamocortical iterative integration during conscious perception of fused colour, while inhibitory control was revealed during the non-fusion condition. Taken together with our recent magnetoencephalography study, our fMRI findings corroborate a thalamocortical inhibitory model for consciousness, where both thalamic inhibitory regulation and integrative signal iterations across higher-order thalamocortical regions are essential for conscious perception. © 2022
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