Contributions of the Ventral Striatum to Conscious Perception: An Intracranial EEG Study of the Attentional Blink.
Heleen A SlagterDavid A SeminowiczLeon C ReteigRuud SmoldersMartijn FigeeMariska MantioneP Richard SchuurmanDamiaan A J P DenysPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
What determines whether we become aware of a piece of information or not? Conscious access has been robustly associated with activity within a distributed network of cortical regions. Using intracranial electrophysiological recordings during an attentional blink task, we tested the idea that the ventral striatum, because of its ability to modulate cortical information flow, may contribute to conscious perception. We find that conscious perception is influenced and signaled by ventral striatal activity. Short-latency (80-140 ms) striatal responses to a first target determined conscious perception of a second target. Moreover, conscious perception of the second target was signaled by longer-latency (200-400 ms) striatal activity. These results suggest that the ventral striatum may be part of a subcortical network that influences conscious experience.