Dorsal Posterior Parietal rTMS Affects Voluntary Orienting of Visuospatial Attention
Open Access
- 1 September 2004
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 15 (5), 628-638
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhh164
Abstract
Patients with lesions in posterior parietal cortex (PPC) are relatively unimpaired in voluntarily directing visual attention to different spatial locations, while many neuroimaging studies in healthy subjects suggest dorsal PPC involvement in this function. We used an offline repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) protocol to study this issue further. Ten healthy participants performed a cue–target paradigm. Cues prompted covert orienting of spatial attention under voluntary control to either a left or right visual field position. Targets were flashed subsequently at the cued or uncued location, or bilaterally. Following rTMS over right dorsal PPC, (i) the benefit for target detection at cued versus uncued positions was preserved irrespective of cueing direction (left- or rightward), but (ii) leftward cueing was associated with a global impairment in target detection, at all target locations. This reveals that leftward orienting was still possible after right dorsal PPC stimulation, albeit at an increased overall cost for target detection. In addition, rTMS (iii) impaired left, but (iv) enhanced right target detection after rightward cueing. The finding of a global drop in target detection during leftward orienting with a spared, relative detection benefit at the cued (left) location (i–ii) suggests that right dorsal PPC plays a subsidiary rather than pivotal role in voluntary spatial orienting. This finding reconciles seemingly conflicting results from patients and neuroimaging studies. The finding of attentional inhibition and enhancement occurring contra- and ipsilaterally to the stimulation site (iii–iv) supports the view that spatial attention bias can be selectively modulated through rTMS, which has proven useful to transiently reduce visual hemispatial neglect.Keywords
This publication has 58 references indexed in Scilit:
- 1 Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation of the unaffected hemisphere ameliorates contralesional visuospatial neglect in humansNeuroscience Letters, 2003
- Perceptual and response bias in visuospatial neglect due to frontal and parietal repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in normal subjectsNeuroReport, 2002
- Spatial neglect in near and far space investigated by repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulationBrain, 2002
- Visual and motor cortex excitability: a transcranial magnetic stimulation studyClinical Neurophysiology, 2002
- Control of goal-directed and stimulus-driven attention in the brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
- Orienting of attention in left unilateral neglectNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2001
- Modulating the attentional bias in unilateral neglect: the effects of the strategic setExperimental Brain Research, 2001
- Reduction of human visual cortex excitability using 1-Hz transcranial magnetic stimulationNeurology, 2000
- Frontoparietal cortical networks for directing attention and the eye to visual locations: Identical, independent, or overlapping neural systems?Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1998
- Depression of motor cortex excitability by low‐frequency transcranial magnetic stimulationNeurology, 1997