Authors
Fu, B., Lin, K., Chen, Y., Zhang, J., Jin, Z., & Li, L.
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines14020336Abstract
Background/Objectives:
Temporal attention and temporal expectation are two key mechanisms that facilitate perception by prioritizing information at specific moments and by leveraging temporal predictability, respectively. While their behavioral interaction is established, the underlying neural mechanisms remain poorly understood. Building on functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) evidence linking temporal attention to parietal cortex activity and the role of alpha oscillations in temporal prediction, we investigated whether the right posterior parietal cortex (rPPC) may be involved in integrating these two processes. Methods: Experiment 1 used a behavioral paradigm to dissociate temporal expectation from attention across 600 ms and 1400 ms intervals. Experiment 2 retained only the 600 ms interval, combining behavioral assessments with electroencephalography (EEG), recording following transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) applied to the rPPC to probe neural mechanisms. Results: Experiment 1 showed an attention/expectation interaction exclusively at 600 ms: enhanced expectation improved response times under attended, not unattended, conditions. Experiment 2 replicated these behavioral and event-related potential (ERP) findings. Temporal attention modulated N1 amplitude: in attended conditions, the N1 was significantly more negative under high versus low expectation, while no difference was observed in unattended contexts. Anodal tACS over the rPPC reduced this N1 amplitude difference between high and low attentional expectation conditions to non-significance. Restricting analyses to attended conditions, paired-samples t-tests revealed that alpha-band power differed between high and low expectation under sham tACS, but this difference was absent under anodal tACS, which also attenuated the corresponding behavioral attention/expectation interaction effects. Conclusions: These findings provide suggestive evidence that the rPPC may be key to integrating temporal attention and expectation, occurring in early processing stages and specific to brief intervals.