Cell Reports
Volume 35, Issue 5, 4 May 2021, 109081
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Article
Anterior insula regulates brain network transitions that gate conscious access

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.celrep.2021.109081Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Dysfunction of anterior insula during anesthesia disables brain network transitions

  • Prestimulus activity of anterior insula predicts conscious access of visual stimuli

  • Anterior insula might be a gate for conscious access of sensory information

  • This cortical gate occupies an intermediate position along a neurocognitive hierarchy

Summary

Conscious access to sensory information is likely gated at an intermediate site between primary sensory and transmodal association cortices, but the structure responsible remains unknown. We perform functional neuroimaging to determine the neural correlates of conscious access using a volitional mental imagery task, a report paradigm not confounded by motor behavior. Titrating propofol to loss of behavioral responsiveness in healthy volunteers creates dysfunction of the anterior insular cortex (AIC) in association with an impairment of dynamic transitions of default-mode and dorsal attention networks. Candidate subcortical regions mediating sensory gating or arousal (thalamus, basal forebrain) fail to show this association. The gating role of the AIC is consistent with findings in awake participants, whose conscious access is predicted by pre-stimulus AIC activity near perceptual threshold. These data support the hypothesis that AIC, situated at an intermediate position of the cortical hierarchy, regulates brain network transitions that gate conscious access.

Keywords

consciousness
conscious access
anterior insular cortex
functional hierarchy
anesthesia
perceptual awareness
fMRI
cortical gradients
default-mode network
prestimulus activity

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