Abstract
AbstractResearch on brain-behaviour relationships often makes the implicit assumption that these derive from a co-variation of stochastic fluctuations in brain activity and performance across trials of an experiment. However, challenging this assumption, oscillatory brain activity, as well as indicators of performance, such as response speed, can show systematic trends with time on task. Here we tested whether time-on-task trends explain a range of relationships between oscillatory brain activity and response speed, accuracy as well as decision confidence. Thirty-six participants performed 900 trials of a two-alternative forced choice visual discrimination task with confidence ratings. Pre- and post-stimulus spectral power (1-40Hz) and aperiodic (i.e., non-oscillatory) components were compared across blocks of the experimental session and tested for relationships with behavioural performance. We found that time-on-task effects on oscillatory EEG activity were primarily localised within the alpha band, with alpha power increasing and peak alpha frequency decreasing over time, even when controlling for aperiodic contributions. Aperiodic, broadband activity on the other hand did not show time-on-task effects in our data set. Importantly, time-on-task effects in alpha frequency and power explained variability in single-trial reaction times, and controlling for time-on-task effectively removed these relationships. However, time-on-task effects did not affect other EEG signatures of behavioural performance, including post-stimulus predictors of single-trial decision confidence. Our results dissociate alpha-band brain-behaviour relationships that can be explained away by time-on-task from those that remain after accounting for it - thereby further specifying the potential functional roles of alpha in human visual perception.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory