Self-Regulation of the Posterior–Frontal Brain Activity with Real-Time fMRI Neurofeedback to Influence Perceptual Discrimination

Author:

Kim Sunjung1,Dalboni da Rocha Josue Luiz2ORCID,Birbaumer Niels1,Sitaram Ranganatha2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Medical Psychology and Behavioral Neurobiology, University of Tuebingen, 72076 Tuebingen, Germany

2. St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital, Memphis, TN 38111, USA

Abstract

The Global Neuronal Workspace (GNW) hypothesis states that the visual percept is available to conscious awareness only if recurrent long-distance interactions among distributed brain regions activate neural circuitry extending from the posterior areas to prefrontal regions above a certain excitation threshold. To directly test this hypothesis, we trained 14 human participants to increase blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) signals with real-time functional magnetic resonance imaging (rtfMRI)-based neurofeedback simultaneously in four specific regions of the occipital, temporal, insular and prefrontal parts of the brain. Specifically, we hypothesized that the up-regulation of the mean BOLD activity in the posterior–frontal brain regions lowers the perceptual threshold for visual stimuli, while down-regulation raises the threshold. Our results showed that participants could perform up-regulation (Wilcoxon test, session 1: p = 0.022; session 4: p = 0.041) of the posterior–frontal brain activity, but not down-regulation. Furthermore, the up-regulation training led to a significant reduction in the visual perceptual threshold, but no substantial change in perceptual threshold was observed after the down-regulation training. These findings show that the up-regulation of the posterior–frontal regions improves the perceptual discrimination of the stimuli. However, further questions as to whether the posterior–frontal regions can be down-regulated at all, and whether down-regulation raises the perceptual threshold, remain unanswered.

Funder

Ministry of Science, Research and the Arts of Baden-Württemberg

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

European Union

BRAIN TRAIN

Stiftung Volkswagen

German Center for Diabetes Research

Singapore-Baden-Württemberg Life Sciences

EU-India

Publisher

MDPI AG

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