Temporal Constraints of Behavioral Inhibition: Relevance of Inter-stimulus Interval in a Go-Nogo Task
Artículo
Publication date
2014Metadata
Show full item record
Cómo citar
Zamorano, Francisco
Cómo citar
Temporal Constraints of Behavioral Inhibition: Relevance of Inter-stimulus Interval in a Go-Nogo Task
Author
Abstract
The capacity to inhibit prepotent and automatic responses is crucial for proper cognitive and social development, and
inhibitory impairments have been considered to be key for some neuropsychiatric conditions. One of the most used
paradigms to analyze inhibitory processes is the Go-Nogo task (GNG). This task has been widely used in psychophysical and
cognitive EEG studies, and more recently in paradigms using fMRI. However, a technical limitation is that the time resolution
of fMRI is poorer than that of the EEG technique. In order to compensate for these temporal constraints, it has become
common practice in the fMRI field to use longer inter-stimulus intervals (ISI) than those used in EEG protocols. Despite the
noticeable temporal differences between these two techniques, it is currently assumed that both approaches assess similar
inhibitory processes. We performed an EEG study using a GNG task with both short ISI (fast-condition, FC, as in EEG
protocols) and long ISI (slow-condition, SC, as in fMRI protocols). We found that in the FC there was a stronger Nogo-N2
effect than in the SC. Moreover, in the FC, but not in the SC, the number of preceding Go trials correlated positively with the
Nogo-P3 amplitude and with the Go trial reaction time; and negatively with commission errors. In addition, we found
significant topographical differences for the Go-P3 elicited in FC and SC, which is interpreted in terms of different
neurotransmitter dynamics. Taken together, our results provide evidence that frequency of stimulus presentation in the
GNG task strongly modulates the behavioral response and the evoked EEG activity. Therefore, it is likely that short-ISI EEG
protocols and long-ISI fMRI protocols do not assess equivalent inhibitory processes.
General note
Artículo de publicación ISI
Patrocinador
This work was supported by the Millenium Center for the Neuroscience of Memory, Chile (NC10-001-F), which is developed with funds from the
Innovation for Competitivity from the Ministry for Economics, Fomentation and Tourism, Chile.
Identifier
URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/129538
DOI: doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0087232
Quote Item
PLoS ONE 9(1): e87232, 2014
Collections