Evidence of Attenuation in Higher-Level Cognitive Functions

© LNCO / 2021 EPFL

© LNCO / 2021 EPFL

We perceive sensory events as less intense when they are self-generated compared to externally-generated ones. This phenomenon, called attenuation enables us to distinguish sensory events from self and external origins. Results from our novel fMRI paradigm that were just published in the Journal of Neuroscience indicate that attenuation of self-generated stimuli is not limited to sensory consequences but also impact cognitive processes such as numerosity estimations.

Abstract Previous studies have shown that self-generated stimuli in auditory, visual, and somatosensory domains are attenuated, producing decreased behavioral and neural responses compared to the same stimuli that are externally generated. Yet, whether such attenuation also occurs for higher-level cognitive functions beyond sensorimotor processing remains unknown. In this study, we assessed whether cognitive functions such as numerosity estimations are subject to attenuation in 56 healthy participants (32 women). We designed a task allowing the controlled comparison of numerosity estimations for self (active condition) and externally (passive condition) generated words. Our behavioral results showed a larger underestimation of self- compared to externally-generated words, suggesting that numerosity estimations for self-generated words are attenuated. Moreover, the linear relationship between the reported and actual number of words was stronger for self-generated words, although the ability to track errors about numerosity estimations was similar across conditions. Neuroimaging results revealed that numerosity underestimation involved increased functional connectivity between the right intraparietal sulcus and an extended network (bilateral supplementary motor area, left inferior parietal lobule and left superior temporal gyrus) when estimating the number of self vs. externally generated words. We interpret our results in light of two models of attenuation and discuss their perceptual versus cognitive origins.

These findings extend our recent work on attenuation of cognitive and conscious processes, such as thought consciousness and thought insertion (Serino et al., 2021 iScience).

Funding

This work was supported by the Bertarelli Foundation (grant number 532024), the Swiss National Science Foundation (grant number 3100A0-112493), National Center of Competence in Research (NCCR) "Synapsy - The Synaptic Bases of Mental Diseases" (grant number 51NF40 – 185897), and two generous donors advised by Carigest SA. Nathan Faivre has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant number 803122).