par  Chéron, Guy  ;Leroy, Axelle
;Leroy, Axelle  ;Palmero Soler, Ernesto
;Palmero Soler, Ernesto  ;De Saedeleer, Caty
;De Saedeleer, Caty  ;Bengoetxea, Ana
;Bengoetxea, Ana  ;Cebolla Alvarez, Ana Maria
;Cebolla Alvarez, Ana Maria  ;Vidal, Manuel;Dan, Bernard
;Vidal, Manuel;Dan, Bernard  ;Berthoz, Alain;McIntyre, Joseph
;Berthoz, Alain;McIntyre, Joseph
Référence PloS one, 9, 1, e82371
Publication Publié, 2014-01
           ;Leroy, Axelle
;Leroy, Axelle  ;Palmero Soler, Ernesto
;Palmero Soler, Ernesto  ;De Saedeleer, Caty
;De Saedeleer, Caty  ;Bengoetxea, Ana
;Bengoetxea, Ana  ;Cebolla Alvarez, Ana Maria
;Cebolla Alvarez, Ana Maria  ;Vidal, Manuel;Dan, Bernard
;Vidal, Manuel;Dan, Bernard  ;Berthoz, Alain;McIntyre, Joseph
;Berthoz, Alain;McIntyre, JosephRéférence PloS one, 9, 1, e82371
Publication Publié, 2014-01
                                                                                                       
			Article révisé par les pairs
                                                  
        | Résumé : | Visual perception is not only based on incoming visual signals but also on information about a multimodal reference frame that incorporates vestibulo-proprioceptive input and motor signals. In addition, top-down modulation of visual processing has previously been demonstrated during cognitive operations including selective attention and working memory tasks. In the absence of a stable gravitational reference, the updating of salient stimuli becomes crucial for successful visuo-spatial behavior by humans in weightlessness. Here we found that visually-evoked potentials triggered by the image of a tunnel just prior to an impending 3D movement in a virtual navigation task were altered in weightlessness aboard the International Space Station, while those evoked by a classical 2D-checkerboard were not. Specifically, the analysis of event-related spectral perturbations and inter-trial phase coherency of these EEG signals recorded in the frontal and occipital areas showed that phase-locking of theta-alpha oscillations was suppressed in weightlessness, but only for the 3D tunnel image. Moreover, analysis of the phase of the coherency demonstrated the existence on Earth of a directional flux in the EEG signals from the frontal to the occipital areas mediating a top-down modulation during the presentation of the image of the 3D tunnel. In weightlessness, this fronto-occipital, top-down control was transformed into a diverging flux from the central areas toward the frontal and occipital areas. These results demonstrate that gravity-related sensory inputs modulate primary visual areas depending on the affordances of the visual scene. © 2014 Cheron et al. | 



