Cerebral bases of subliminal and supraliminal priming during reading

被引:100
作者
Kouider, Sid [1 ]
Dehaene, Stanislas
Jobert, Antoinette
Le Bihan, Denis
机构
[1] CEA, DSV, Serv Hosp Frederic Joliot, IFR 49,Unite INSERM Cognit Neuroimaging 562, F-91401 Orsay, France
[2] DEC ENS, CNRS, EHESS, Lab Sci Cognit & Psycholinguist, Paris, France
[3] Coll France, F-75231 Paris, France
[4] CEA, Serv Hosp Frederic Joliot, DSV, Anatom & Funct Neuroimaging Unit, F-91406 Orsay, France
关键词
consciousness; fMRI; priming; reading; subliminal; VISUAL WORD RECOGNITION; FRONTAL EYE FIELD; CHANGE-BLINDNESS; ATTENTIONAL BLINK; FUNCTIONAL NEUROANATOMY; NEUROIMAGING EVIDENCE; PERCEPTUAL AWARENESS; OCCIPITAL CORTEX; TEMPORAL CORTEX; NAMING LATENCY;
D O I
10.1093/cercor/bhl110
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Several studies have investigated the neural correlates of conscious perception by contrasting functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) activation to conscious and nonconscious visual stimuli. The results often reveal an amplification of posterior occipito-temporal activation and its extension into a parieto-frontal network. However, some of these effects might be due to a greater deployment of attentional or strategical processes in the conscious condition. Here, we examined the brain activity evoked by visible and invisible stimuli, both of which were irrelevant to the task. We collected fMRI data in a masking paradigm in which subliminal versus supraliminal letter strings were presented as primes while subjects focused attention on another subsequent, highly visible target word. Under those conditions, prime visibility was associated with greater activity confined to bilateral posterior occipito-temporal cortices, without extension into frontal and parietal cortices. However, supraliminal primes, compared with subliminal primes, evoked more extensive repetition suppression in a widely distributed set of parieto-frontal areas. Furthermore, only supraliminal primes caused phonological repetition enhancement in left inferior frontal and anterior insular cortex. Those results suggest a 2-stage view of conscious access: Relative to masked stimuli, unmasked stimuli elicit increased occipito-temporal activity, thus allowing them to compete for global conscious access and to induce priming in multiple distant areas. In the absence of attention, however, their access to a second stage of distributed parieto-frontal processing may remain blocked.
引用
收藏
页码:2019 / 2029
页数:11
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