Bistability of prefrontal states gates access to consciousness
bioRxiv Preprint Server January 29, 2020 Abhilash Dwarakanath, Vishal Kapoor, Joachim Werner et al. 15 citations preprint
Access of sensory information to consciousness depends on neural activity crossing a threshold in the prefrontal cortex (PFC), yet how brain state fluctuations interact with conscious content is unclear. Using multielectrode recordings during a no-report binocular rivalry task in animals, two distinct prefrontal states were identified: low-frequency (1-9 Hz) bursts that precede spontaneous switches in conscious perception (perceptual update), and beta-band (20-40 Hz) bursts correlated with stable perception. Beta bursts synchronize neural ensembles coding the perceived stimulus. Similar fluctuations occur during rest, suggesting they are endogenous. The findings indicate that global cortical states, not selective spiking, drive internal switches in conscious perception.