Spectral signature and behavioral consequence of spontaneous shifts of pupil-linked arousal in human.
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ABSTRACT: Arousal levels perpetually rise and fall spontaneously. How markers of arousal-pupil size and frequency content of brain activity-relate to each other and influence behavior in humans is poorly understood. We simultaneously monitored magnetoencephalography and pupil in healthy volunteers at rest and during a visual perceptual decision-making task. Spontaneously varying pupil size correlates with power of brain activity in most frequency bands across large-scale resting state cortical networks. Pupil size recorded at prestimulus baseline correlates with subsequent shifts in detection bias (c) and sensitivity (d'). When dissociated from pupil-linked state, prestimulus spectral power of resting state networks still predicts perceptual behavior. Fast spontaneous pupil constriction and dilation correlate with large-scale brain activity as well but not perceptual behavior. Our results illuminate the relation between central and peripheral arousal markers and their respective roles in human perceptual decision-making.
SUBMITTER: Podvalny E
PROVIDER: S-EPMC8486382 | biostudies-literature |
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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