Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems

Sensory information is represented and elaborated in hierarchical cortical systems that are thought to be dedicated to individual sensory modalities. This traditional view of sensory cortex organization has been challenged by recent evidence of multimodal responses in primary and association sensory...

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Main Authors: Md Shoaibur Rahman, Kelly Anne Barnes, Lexi E. Crommett, Mark Tommerdahl, Jeffrey M. Yau
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-07-01
Series:NeuroImage
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811920303244
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spelling doaj-983bd56d831d4a16bc84edf17f462b202020-11-25T03:02:24ZengElsevierNeuroImage1095-95722020-07-01215116837Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systemsMd Shoaibur Rahman0Kelly Anne Barnes1Lexi E. Crommett2Mark Tommerdahl3Jeffrey M. Yau4Department of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX, 77030, USADepartment of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX, 77030, USA; Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, San Jacinto College - South, Houston, 13735 Beamer Rd, S13.269, Houston, TX, 77089, USADepartment of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX, 77030, USADepartment of Biomedical Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB No. 7575, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USADepartment of Neuroscience, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, One Baylor Plaza, Houston, TX, 77030, USA; Corresponding author. One Baylor Plaza, T111 Houston, TX, 77030, USA.Sensory information is represented and elaborated in hierarchical cortical systems that are thought to be dedicated to individual sensory modalities. This traditional view of sensory cortex organization has been challenged by recent evidence of multimodal responses in primary and association sensory areas. Although it is indisputable that sensory areas respond to multiple modalities, it remains unclear whether these multimodal responses reflect selective information processing for particular stimulus features. Here, we used fMRI adaptation to identify brain regions that are sensitive to the temporal frequency information contained in auditory, tactile, and audiotactile stimulus sequences. A number of brain regions distributed over the parietal and temporal lobes exhibited frequency-selective temporal response modulation for both auditory and tactile stimulus events, as indexed by repetition suppression effects. A smaller set of regions responded to crossmodal adaptation sequences in a frequency-dependent manner. Despite an extensive overlap of multimodal frequency-selective responses across the parietal and temporal lobes, representational similarity analysis revealed a cortical “regional landscape” that clearly reflected distinct somatosensory and auditory processing systems that converged on modality-invariant areas. These structured relationships between brain regions were also evident in spontaneous signal fluctuation patterns measured at rest. Our results reveal that multimodal processing in human cortex can be feature-specific and that multimodal frequency representations are embedded in the intrinsically hierarchical organization of cortical sensory systems.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811920303244MultimodalMultisensoryCrossmodalSupramodalAudiotactileRepresentational similarity analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Md Shoaibur Rahman
Kelly Anne Barnes
Lexi E. Crommett
Mark Tommerdahl
Jeffrey M. Yau
spellingShingle Md Shoaibur Rahman
Kelly Anne Barnes
Lexi E. Crommett
Mark Tommerdahl
Jeffrey M. Yau
Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
NeuroImage
Multimodal
Multisensory
Crossmodal
Supramodal
Audiotactile
Representational similarity analysis
author_facet Md Shoaibur Rahman
Kelly Anne Barnes
Lexi E. Crommett
Mark Tommerdahl
Jeffrey M. Yau
author_sort Md Shoaibur Rahman
title Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
title_short Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
title_full Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
title_fullStr Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
title_full_unstemmed Auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
title_sort auditory and tactile frequency representations are co-embedded in modality-defined cortical sensory systems
publisher Elsevier
series NeuroImage
issn 1095-9572
publishDate 2020-07-01
description Sensory information is represented and elaborated in hierarchical cortical systems that are thought to be dedicated to individual sensory modalities. This traditional view of sensory cortex organization has been challenged by recent evidence of multimodal responses in primary and association sensory areas. Although it is indisputable that sensory areas respond to multiple modalities, it remains unclear whether these multimodal responses reflect selective information processing for particular stimulus features. Here, we used fMRI adaptation to identify brain regions that are sensitive to the temporal frequency information contained in auditory, tactile, and audiotactile stimulus sequences. A number of brain regions distributed over the parietal and temporal lobes exhibited frequency-selective temporal response modulation for both auditory and tactile stimulus events, as indexed by repetition suppression effects. A smaller set of regions responded to crossmodal adaptation sequences in a frequency-dependent manner. Despite an extensive overlap of multimodal frequency-selective responses across the parietal and temporal lobes, representational similarity analysis revealed a cortical “regional landscape” that clearly reflected distinct somatosensory and auditory processing systems that converged on modality-invariant areas. These structured relationships between brain regions were also evident in spontaneous signal fluctuation patterns measured at rest. Our results reveal that multimodal processing in human cortex can be feature-specific and that multimodal frequency representations are embedded in the intrinsically hierarchical organization of cortical sensory systems.
topic Multimodal
Multisensory
Crossmodal
Supramodal
Audiotactile
Representational similarity analysis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1053811920303244
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