The reduction of neural responses to self-generated stimuli compared to external stimuli is thought to result from the matching of motor-based sensory predictions and sensory reafferences and to serve the identification of changes in the environment as caused by oneself. The amplitude of the auditory event-related potential (ERP) component N1 seems to closely reflect this matching process, while the later positive component (P2/ P3a) has been associated with judgments of agency, which are also sensitive to contextual top-down information. In this study, we examined the effect of perceived control over sound production on the processing of self-generated and external stimuli, as reflected in these components. We used a new version of a classic two-button choice task to induce different degrees of the illusion of control (IoC) and recorded ERPs for the processing of self-generated and external sounds in a subsequent task. N1 amplitudes were reduced for self-generated compared to external sounds, but not significantly affected by IoC. P2/3a amplitudes were affected by IoC: We found reduced P2/3a amplitudes after a high compared to a low IoC induction training, but only for self-generated, not for external sounds. These findings suggest that prior contextual belief information induced by an IoC affects later processing as reflected in the P2/P3a, possibly for the formation of agency judgments, while early processing reflecting motor-based predictions is not affected.
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J Glob Health
December 2024
Centre for Global Health, Usher Institute, The University of Edinburgh, UK.
Humans have developed sensory organs for their 'major' senses and specific neuronal receptors for a number of additional senses. Although information from sensors is integrated and processed in the brain, the brain itself has not been proposed as a sensory organ associated with a particular sense - at least not in Western culture or scientific literature. Perception of ideas has many elements of a separate sense, with the brain being a primary sensory organ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
December 2024
Neurology Department, New York University, New York, NY 10016.
When we vocalize, our brain distinguishes self-generated sounds from external ones. A corollary discharge signal supports this function in animals; however, in humans, its exact origin and temporal dynamics remain unknown. We report electrocorticographic recordings in neurosurgical patients and a connectivity analysis framework based on Granger causality that reveals major neural communications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNanoscale
December 2024
Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Nano and Bio Science and Technology, Persian Gulf University, Bushehr, Iran.
Traditional Fenton-like reactions, commonly employed in chemodynamic therapy (CDT) for cancer treatment, face limitations due to the mildly acidic tumor microenvironment (TME) and scarce HO availability. Aiming to overcome these hurdles, we report herein the preparation of copper-cobalt peroxide (CCp) nanoparticles, a novel catalyst that enables a pH-activated, self-supplying HO-mediated cascade reaction. In the slightly acidic TME (pH 6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn approach to generating periodic spiking pulses in a broadband opto-electronic oscillator (OEO) without external injection is proposed and demonstrated. Through biasing the electro-optic Mach-Zehnder modulator (MZM) in the OEO cavity at its nonlinear working point, spiking pulses are excited by the self-generated chaos under the combined action of the loop filter response time and the nonlinear excitation effect. An interaction force is introduced between pulses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA cell routinely responds to one of many competing environmental cues. Does the cell have an intrinsic preference for that cue, or does that cue have the highest extrinsic information content? We introduce a theoretical framework to answer this fundamental question. We derive extrinsic detection limits for four types of directional cues -- external and self-generated chemical gradients, fluid flow, and contact inhibition of locomotion -- and thus predict extrinsic decision boundaries when these cues compete as pairs.
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