Anticipatory and Stimulus-Evoked Blood Oxygenation Level-Dependent Modulations Related to Spatial Attention Reflect a Common Additive Signal

被引:59
作者
Sylvester, Chad M. [1 ]
Shulman, Gordon L. [2 ]
Jack, Anthony I. [4 ]
Corbetta, Maurizio [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Radiol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[2] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Neurol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[3] Washington Univ, Sch Med, Dept Anat & Neurobiol, St Louis, MO 63110 USA
[4] Case Western Reserve Univ, Dept Cognit Sci, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA
关键词
HUMAN VISUAL-CORTEX; CONTRAST RESPONSE FUNCTIONS; CONCURRENT TMS-FMRI; TOP-DOWN CONTROL; NEURAL MECHANISMS; PARIETAL CORTEX; MACAQUE MT; PERFORMANCE; PREDICTS; MOTION;
D O I
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1141-09.2009
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Covert attention is associated with prestimulus blood oxygenation level-dependent (BOLD) modulations in visual cortex. In some situations, this preparatory activity can predict how well human subjects will perceive upcoming visual objects. Preparatory activity may mediate this behavioral effect by affecting the stimulus-evoked response, but the relationship between preparatory and stimulus-evoked BOLD modulations is unclear. Here, we examine this relationship by comparing the effects of spatial attention on anticipatory and stimulus-evoked signals and by measuring the trial-to-trial correlation between prestimulus and poststimulus modulations. We find that in extrastriate visual cortex (V4), modulations related to spatial attention are relatively large, extend from prestimulus through the peak of the evoked response, and are slightly larger in the evoked response compared with the prestimulus response. In striate cortex (V1), the frontal eye fields (FEF), and the intraparietal sulcus (IPS), modulations related to spatial attention are relatively small, are confined primarily to the prestimulus period, and are slightly larger in preparatory versus stimulus-evoked activity. Importantly, across visual cortex, the attentional biases (activity for attended versus unattended locations) in preparatory and evoked activity are more positively correlated, trial-by-trial, than would be expected on the basis of activity measured in subjects at rest. We argue that this pattern of results suggests that the same mechanisms underlie preparatory and stimulus-evoked BOLD modulations related to spatial attention and that incoming sensory signals add to preexistent biases in preparatory activity to generate the stimulus-evoked response.
引用
收藏
页码:10671 / 10682
页数:12
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]   The psychophysics toolbox [J].
Brainard, DH .
SPATIAL VISION, 1997, 10 (04) :433-436
[2]   Top-down control of human visual cortex by frontal and parietal cortex in anticipatory visual spatial attention [J].
Bressler, Steven L. ;
Tang, Wei ;
Sylvester, Chad M. ;
Shulman, Gordon L. ;
Corbetta, Maurizio .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2008, 28 (40) :10056-10061
[3]   A relationship between behavioral choice and the visual responses of neurons in macaque MT [J].
Britten, KH ;
Newsome, WT ;
Shadlen, MN ;
Celebrini, S ;
Movshon, JA .
VISUAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1996, 13 (01) :87-100
[4]   RESPONSES OF NEURONS IN MACAQUE MT TO STOCHASTIC MOTION SIGNALS [J].
BRITTEN, KH ;
SHADLEN, MN ;
NEWSOME, WT ;
MOVSHON, JA .
VISUAL NEUROSCIENCE, 1993, 10 (06) :1157-1169
[5]  
BRITTEN KH, 1992, J NEUROSCI, V12, P4745
[6]   The effect of spatial attention on contrast response functions in human visual cortex [J].
Buracas, Giedrius T. ;
Boynton, Geoffrey M. .
JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2007, 27 (01) :93-97
[7]   Control of goal-directed and stimulus-driven attention in the brain [J].
Corbetta, M ;
Shulman, GL .
NATURE REVIEWS NEUROSCIENCE, 2002, 3 (03) :201-215
[8]   Neural Mechanisms of Selective Visual Attention [J].
Moore, Tirin ;
Zirnsak, Marc .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF PSYCHOLOGY, VOL 68, 2017, 68 :47-72
[9]   Pre-target activity in visual cortex predicts behavioral performance on spatial and feature attention tasks [J].
Giesbrecht, B ;
Weissman, DH ;
Woldorff, MG ;
Manqun, GR .
BRAIN RESEARCH, 2006, 1080 :63-72
[10]   The neural basis of decision making [J].
Gold, Joshua I. ;
Shadlen, Michael N. .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2007, 30 :535-574