Orienting auditory spatial attention engages frontal eye fields and medial occipital cortex in congenitally blind humans

被引:44
作者
Garg, Arun [1 ]
Schwartz, Daniel [1 ]
Stevens, Alexander A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Oregon Hlth & Sci Univ, Dept Psychiat, Portland, OR 97239 USA
关键词
fMRI; endogenous; cue; covert; reorganization; plasticity;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2007.02.015
中图分类号
B84 [心理学]; C [社会科学总论]; Q98 [人类学];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ; 030303 ; 04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
What happens in vision-related cortical areas when congenitally blind (CB) individuals orient attention to spatial locations? Previous neuroimaging of sighted individuals has found overlapping activation in a network of frontoparietal areas including frontal eye fields (FEF), during both overt (with eye movement) and covert (without eye movement) shifts of spatial attention. Since voluntary eye movement planning seems irrelevant in CB, their FEF neurons should be recruited for alternative functions if their attentional role in sighted individuals is only due to eye movement planning. Recent neuroimaging of the blind has also reported activation in medial occipital areas, normally associated with visual processing, during a diverse set of non-visual tasks, but their response to attentional shifts remains poorly understood. Here, we used event-related fMRI to explore FEF and medial occipital areas in CB individuals and sighted controls with eyes closed (SC) performing a covert attention orienting task with endogenous verbal cues and spatialized auditory targets. We found robust stimulus-locked FEF activation of all CB subjects, similar to and stronger than in SC, suggesting that FEF plays a role in endogenous orienting of covert spatial attention even in individuals in whom voluntary eye movements are irrelevant. We also found robust activation in bilateral medial occipital cortex in CB but not in SC subjects. The response decreased below baseline following endogenous verbal cues but increased following auditory targets, suggesting that the medial occipital area in CB does not directly engage during cued orienting of attention but may be recruited for processing of spatialized auditory targets. (c) 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:2307 / 2321
页数:15
相关论文
共 100 条
[71]   Effects of interstimulus interval on auditory event-related potentials in congenitally blind and normally sighted humans [J].
Röder, B ;
Rösler, F ;
Neville, HJ .
NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 1999, 264 (1-3) :53-56
[72]   Domain specificity in the primate prefrontal cortex [J].
Romanski L.M. .
Cognitive, Affective, & Behavioral Neuroscience, 2004, 4 (4) :421-429
[73]   Dual streams of auditory afferents target multiple domains in the primate prefrontal cortex [J].
Romanski, LM ;
Tian, B ;
Fritz, J ;
Mishkin, M ;
Goldman-Rakic, PS ;
Rauschecker, JP .
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE, 1999, 2 (12) :1131-1136
[74]   Concurrent TMS-fMRI and psychophysics reveal frontal influences on human retinotopic visual cortex [J].
Ruff, Christian C. ;
Blankenburg, Felix ;
Bjoertomt, Otto ;
Bestmann, Sven ;
Freeman, Elliot ;
Haynes, John-Dylan ;
Rees, Geraint ;
Josephs, Oliver ;
Deichmann, Ralf ;
Driver, Jon .
CURRENT BIOLOGY, 2006, 16 (15) :1479-1488
[75]  
RUSSO G S, 1989, Society for Neuroscience Abstracts, V15, P1204
[76]   FRONTAL EYE FIELD ACTIVITY PRECEDING AURALLY GUIDED SACCADES [J].
RUSSO, GS ;
BRUCE, CJ .
JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1994, 71 (03) :1250-1253
[77]   Neural networks for Braille reading by the blind [J].
Sadato, N ;
Pascual-Leone, A ;
Grafman, J ;
Deiber, MP ;
Ibañez, V ;
Hallett, M .
BRAIN, 1998, 121 :1213-1229
[78]   Critical period for cross-modal plasticity in blind humans: A functional MRI study [J].
Sadato, N ;
Okada, T ;
Honda, M ;
Yonekura, Y .
NEUROIMAGE, 2002, 16 (02) :389-400
[79]   Activation of the primary visual cortex by Braille reading in blind subjects [J].
Sadato, N ;
PascualLeone, A ;
Grafman, J ;
Ibanez, V ;
Deiber, MP ;
Dold, G ;
Hallett, M .
NATURE, 1996, 380 (6574) :526-528
[80]   On the role of frontal eye field in guiding attention and saccades [J].
Schall, JD .
VISION RESEARCH, 2004, 44 (12) :1453-1467