Functional Segregation within the Dorsal Frontoparietal Network: A Multimodal Dynamic Causal Modeling Study

Author:

Raffin Estelle12ORCID,Witon Adrien123,Salamanca-Giron Roberto F12,Huxlin Krystel R4,Hummel Friedhelm C125

Affiliation:

1. Defitech Chair in Clinical Neuroengineering, Center for Neuroprosthetics and Brain Mind Institute, EPFL, Geneva CH-1201, Switzerland

2. Defitech Chair in Clinical Neuroengineering, Center for Neuroprosthetics and Brain Mind Institute, Clinique Romande de Readaptation (CRR), EPFL Valais, Sion CH-1950, Switzerland

3. Health IT, IT Department, Hôpital du Valais, Sion, Switzerland

4. The Flaum Eye Institute and Center for Visual Science, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY-14642, USA

5. Clinical Neuroscience, University of Geneva Medical School, Geneva CH-1205, Switzerland

Abstract

Abstract Discrimination and integration of motion direction requires the interplay of multiple brain areas. Theoretical accounts of perception suggest that stimulus-related (i.e., exogenous) and decision-related (i.e., endogenous) factors affect distributed neuronal processing at different levels of the visual hierarchy. To test these predictions, we measured brain activity of healthy participants during a motion discrimination task, using electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). We independently modeled the impact of exogenous factors (task demand) and endogenous factors (perceptual decision-making) on the activity of the motion discrimination network and applied Dynamic Causal Modeling (DCM) to both modalities. DCM for event-related potentials (DCM-ERP) revealed that task demand impacted the reciprocal connections between the primary visual cortex (V1) and medial temporal areas (V5). With practice, higher visual areas were increasingly involved, as revealed by DCM-fMRI. Perceptual decision-making modulated higher levels (e.g., V5-to-Frontal Eye Fields, FEF), in a manner predictive of performance. Our data suggest that lower levels of the visual network support early, feature-based selection of responses, especially when learning strategies have not been implemented. In contrast, perceptual decision-making operates at higher levels of the visual hierarchy by integrating sensory information with the internal state of the subject.

Funder

The Bertarelli Foundation

Swiss National Science Foundation

Personalized Health and Related Technologies

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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