Quantitative analysis of attention and detection signals during visual search

被引:209
作者
Shulman, GL
McAvoy, MP
Cowan, MC
Astafiev, SV
Tansy, AP
d'Avossa, G
Corbetta, M
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[2] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Radiol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[3] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Alzheimers Dis Res Ctr, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[4] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Anat & Neurobiol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1152/jn.00343.2003
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Prior work has distinguished regions in the intraparietal sulcus (IPs) and frontal eye field (FEF) involved in the voluntary control of attention, from more ventral regions in the temporoparietal junction (TPJ) involved in target detection. The present results show that when subjects search for and detect a visual target stimulus among nontargets, these regions show sensory-, search-, and detection-related signals that both confirm and refine these functional distinctions. The different signals were isolated by an additive model that accounted for a large fraction of BOLD ( blood oxygenation level-dependent) signal modulation over the brain. Both IPs and FEF were activated during search through nontargets, consistent with a role in maintaining attention-related signals during search. However, unlike FEF, IPs also showed stimulus-related activations, and may combine signals related to sensory and task-dependent components of salience. Although IPs-FEF showed search- related activations, the TPJ was deactivated during search. TPJ activations were confined to detection-related signals. These results provide a much stronger dissociation between the TPJ and IPs-FEF than previous work, while indicating functional differences between frontal and parietal regions that are often coactivated in studies of attention. Finally, continuous flow models of information processing predict that during search, signals from missed targets should be fed from sensory to associative regions rather than being gated by the decision criterion. Correspondingly, missed targets significantly activated parietal (e.g., right TPJ) and frontal (e.g., anterior insula, anterior cingulate) regions, although with a smaller magnitude than detected targets. Surprisingly, many cortical regions showed equivalent signals from detected targets and the completion of target-absent trials, reflecting a widespread signal unrelated to motor execution.
引用
收藏
页码:3384 / 3397
页数:14
相关论文
共 75 条
  • [31] Dissociating the neural mechanisms of visual attention in change detection using functional MRI
    Huettel, SA
    Güzeldere, G
    McCarthy, G
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2001, 13 (07) : 1006 - 1018
  • [32] Brain-behavior relationships: Evidence from practice effects in spatial stimulus-response compatibility
    Iacoboni, M
    Woods, RP
    Mazziotta, JC
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1996, 76 (01) : 321 - 331
  • [33] Complementary neural mechanisms for tracking items in human working memory
    Jiang, Y
    Haxby, JV
    Martin, A
    Ungerleider, LG
    Parasuraman, R
    [J]. SCIENCE, 2000, 287 (5453) : 643 - 646
  • [34] Increased activity in human visual cortex during directed attention in the absence of visual stimulation
    Kastner, S
    Pinsk, MA
    De Weerd, P
    Desimone, R
    Ungerleider, LG
    [J]. NEURON, 1999, 22 (04) : 751 - 761
  • [35] Neural correlates of a decision in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex of the macaque
    Kim, JN
    Shadlen, MN
    [J]. NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, 1999, 2 (02) : 176 - 185
  • [36] The functional neuroanatomy of target detection:: An fMRI study of visual and auditory oddball tasks
    Linden, DEJ
    Prvulovic, D
    Formisano, E
    Völlinger, M
    Zanella, FE
    Goebel, R
    Dierks, T
    [J]. CEREBRAL CORTEX, 1999, 9 (08) : 815 - 823
  • [37] Directing attention to locations and to sensory modalities: Multiple levels of selective processing revealed with PET
    Macaluso, E
    Frith, CD
    Driver, J
    [J]. CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2002, 12 (04) : 357 - 368
  • [38] OBJECT-RELATED ACTIVITY REVEALED BY FUNCTIONAL MAGNETIC-RESONANCE-IMAGING IN HUMAN OCCIPITAL CORTEX
    MALACH, R
    REPPAS, JB
    BENSON, RR
    KWONG, KK
    JIANG, H
    KENNEDY, WA
    LEDDEN, PJ
    BRADY, TJ
    ROSEN, BR
    TOOTELL, RBH
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1995, 92 (18) : 8135 - 8139
  • [39] A stimulus-driven approach to object identity and location processing in the human brain
    Marois, R
    Leung, HC
    Gore, JC
    [J]. NEURON, 2000, 25 (03) : 717 - 728
  • [40] MAUNSELL JHR, 1983, J NEUROSCI, V3, P2563