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Late Positivity Correlates with Subjective Reports: Evidence from the Low-frequency and High-frequency Reporting Tasks.

Muwang Ye, Anhui Wang, Haiyang Liang, Xiaowen Liu

Neuroscience May 14, 2024 DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroscience.2024.03.034

Summary

A key finding reveals that late positivity (LP) amplitudes increase when participants frequently report visual awareness, suggesting a connection between LP and subjective reporting. In a study with 60 participants, hit rates were significantly lower (25%) in low-frequency tasks compared to high-frequency tasks (100%). Interestingly, visual awareness negativity (VAN) was larger during low-frequency reporting. These results indicate that as the frequency of subjective reports increases, the neural correlates of consciousness related to task relevance and subjective experience become more pronounced.

Abstract

Identifying the neural correlates of consciousness (NCCs) is an important way to understand the fundamental nature of consciousness. By recording event-related potentials (ERPs) using EEG, researchers have found three potential electrophysiological NCCs: early positive correlate of consciousness (enhanced P1), visual awareness negativity (VAN), and late positivity (LP). However, LP may reflect post-perceptual processing associated with subjective reports rather than consciousness per se. The present experiment investigated the relationship between LP and subjective reports. We adopted two subjective reporting tasks that differed in the requirement for subjective reports. In the low-frequency reporting task, participants needed to report whether they saw the target picture in 25% of trials, whereas in the high-frequency reporting task, participants needed to report whether they saw the target picture in each trial. Behavioral results showed that the hit rates were lower and false alarm rates were higher on reporting trials in low-frequency reporting tasks than on reporting trials in high-frequency reporting tasks. Unexpectedly, VAN was larger on reporting trials in the low-frequency reporting task than on reporting trials in the high-frequency reporting task. Importantly, our ERP results showed that LP was larger on reporting trials in the high-frequency reporting task than on reporting trials in the low-frequency reporting task. Thus, our findings indicated that when the frequency of reports was increased, the task relevance of the stimuli increased, which led to larger LP amplitudes. These findings suggest that LP correlates with subjective reports.

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