Response Inhibitory Control Varies with Different Sensory Modalities

Author:

Ikarashi Koyuki12,Sato Daisuke23ORCID,Fujimoto Tomomi23,Edama Mutsuaki24,Baba Yasuhiro3,Yamashiro Koya23

Affiliation:

1. Major in Health and Welfare, Graduate School of Niigata University of Health and Welfare, Niigata City, Niigata 950-3198, Japan

2. Institute for Human Movement and Medical Sciences, Niigata University of Health and Welfare, Niigata City, Niigata 950-3198, Japan

3. Department of Health and Sports, Niigata University of Health and Welfare, Niigata City, Niigata 950-3198, Japan

4. Department of Physical Therapy, Niigata University of Health and Welfare, Niigata City, Niigata 950-3198, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Response inhibition plays an essential role in preventing anticipated and unpredictable events in our daily lives. It is divided into proactive inhibition, where subjects postpone responses to an upcoming signal, and reactive inhibition, where subjects stop an impending movement based on the presentation of a signal. Different types of sensory input are involved in both inhibitions; however, differences in proactive and reactive inhibition with differences in sensory modalities remain unclear. This study compared proactive and reactive inhibitions induced by visual, auditory, and somatosensory signals using the choice reaction task (CRT) and stop-signal task (SST). The experiments showed that proactive inhibitions were significantly higher in the auditory and somatosensory modalities than in the visual modality, whereas reactive inhibitions were not. Examining the proactive inhibition-associated neural processing, the auditory and somatosensory modalities showed significant decreases in P3 amplitudes in Go signal-locked event-related potentials (ERPs) in SST relative to those in CRT; this might reflect a decreasing attentional resource on response execution in SST in both modalities. In contrast, we did not find significant differences in the reactive inhibition-associated ERPs. These results suggest that proactive inhibition varies with different sensory modalities, whereas reactive inhibition does not.

Funder

JSPS

Niigata University of Health and Welfare

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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