Spatially Distributed Encoding of Covert Attentional Shifts in Human Thalamus
نویسندگان
چکیده
Spatial attention modulates signal processing within visual nuclei of the thalamus--but do other nuclei govern the locus of attention in top-down mode? We examined functional MRI (fMRI) data from three subjects performing a task requiring covert attention to 1 of 16 positions in a circular array. Target position was cued after stimulus offset, requiring subjects to perform target detection from iconic visual memory. We found positionally specific responses at multiple thalamic sites, with individual voxels activating at more than one direction of attentional shift. Voxel clusters at anatomically equivalent sites across subjects revealed a broad range of directional tuning at each site, with little sign of contralateral bias. By reference to a thalamic atlas, we identified the nuclear correspondence of the four most reliably activated sites across subjects: mediodorsal/central-intralaminar (oculomotor thalamus), caudal intralaminar/parafascicular, suprageniculate/limitans, and medial pulvinar/lateral posterior. Hence, the cortical network generating a top-down control signal for relocating attention acts in concert with a spatially selective thalamic apparatus-the set of active nuclei mirroring the thalamic territory of cortical "eye-field" areas, thus supporting theories which propose the visuomotor origins of covert attentional selection.
منابع مشابه
Spatially Distributed Encoding of Covert Attentional Shifts
16 17 Spatial attention modulates signal processing within visual nuclei of the thalamus but do other 18 nuclei govern the locus of attention in top-down mode? We examined fMRI data from three 19 subjects performing a task requiring covert attention to one of sixteen positions in a circular 20 array. Target position was cued after stimulus offset, requiring subjects to perform target 21 detecti...
متن کاملA parametric fMRI study of overt and covert shifts of visuospatial attention.
It has recently been demonstrated that a cortical network of visuospatial and oculomotor control areas is active for covert shifts of spatial attention (shifts of attention without eye movements) as well as for overt shifts of spatial attention (shifts of attention with saccadic eye movements). Studies examining activity in this visuospatial network during attentional shifts at a single rate ha...
متن کاملCovert manual response preparation triggers attentional modulations of visual but not auditory processing.
OBJECTIVE We investigated whether covert unimanual response preparation triggers attention shifts, as postulated by the premotor theory of attention, and whether these result in spatially specific modulations of visual and auditory processing. METHODS Visual response cues instructed participants to prepare to lift their left or right index finger in response to a subsequent target stimulus. I...
متن کاملEye movement preparation causes spatially-specific modulation of auditory processing: new evidence from event-related brain potentials.
To investigate whether saccade preparation can modulate processing of auditory stimuli in a spatially-specific fashion, ERPs were recorded for a Saccade task, in which the direction of a prepared saccade was cued, prior to an imperative auditory stimulus indicating whether to execute or withhold that saccade. For comparison, we also ran a conventional Covert Attention task, where the same cue n...
متن کاملERP correlates of shared control mechanisms involved in saccade preparation and in covert attention
We investigated whether attention shifts and eye movement preparation are mediated by shared control mechanisms, as claimed by the premotor theory of attention. ERPs were recorded in three tasks where directional cues presented at the beginning of each trial instructed participants to direct their attention to the cued side without eye movements (Covert task), to prepare an eye movement in the ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره 104 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2010