A Longitudinal study on the impact of high-altitude hypoxia on
perceptual processes
Abstract
This study aimed to explore the neural mechanism underlying
high-altitude (HA) adaptation and deadaptation on perceptual processes
in lowlanders. Eighteen healthy lowlanders were administered a facial
S1-S2 matching task that included incomplete face (S1) and complete face
(S2) photographs, combined with ERP technology. Participants were tested
shortly before they went to HA at sea level (Test 1), twenty-five days
after entering HA (Test 2), one week (Test 3) and one month (Test 4)
after returning to lowlands. Compared with sea level baseline, shorter
latencies of P1 and N170 and larger amplitudes of complete face N170
were found in HA. After returning to sea level, compared with HA, the
amplitude of the incomplete face P1 was smaller after one week and the
complete face was smaller after one month. The right hemisphere N170
amplitude was larger after entering HA and one week after returning to
sea level compared to baseline, but it returned to baseline after one
month. Taken together, the current findings suggest that HA adaptation
increases visual cortex excitation to accelerate perceptual processing.
More mental resources are recruited during the configural encoding stage
of complete faces after HA exposure. The perceptual processes affected
by HA exposure is reversible after returning to sea level, but the
low-level processing stage is different between incomplete and complete
faces due to neural compensation mechanisms. The configural encoding
stage in the right hemisphere is affected by HA exposure and requires
more than one week but less than one month to recover to baseline