Cortical Mechanisms for Shifting and Holding Visuospatial Attention
Open Access
- 13 April 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Cerebral Cortex
- Vol. 18 (1), 114-125
- https://doi.org/10.1093/cercor/bhm036
Abstract
Access to visual awareness is often determined by covert, voluntary deployments of visual attention. Voluntary orienting without eye movements requires decoupling attention from the locus of fixation, a shift to the desired location, and maintenance of attention at that location. We used event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging to dissociate these components while observers shifted attention among 3 streams of letters and digits, one located at fixation and 2 in the periphery. Compared with holding attention at the current location, shifting attention between the peripheral locations was associated with transient increases in neural activity in the superior parietal lobule (SPL) and frontal eye fields (FEF), as in previous studies. The supplementary eye fields and separate portions of SPL and FEF were more active for decoupling attention from fixation than for shifting attention to a new location. Large segments of precentral sulcus (PreCS) and posterior parietal cortex (PPC) were more active when attention was maintained in the periphery than when it was maintained at fixation. We conclude that distinct subcomponents of the dorsal frontoparietal network initiate redeployments of covert attention to new locations and disengage attention from fixation, while sustained activity in lateral regions of PPC and PreCS represents sustained states of peripheral attention.Keywords
This publication has 75 references indexed in Scilit:
- Selection and Maintenance of Saccade Goals in the Human Frontal Eye FieldsJournal of Neurophysiology, 2006
- Sustained Activity in Topographic Areas of Human Posterior Parietal Cortex during Memory-Guided SaccadesJournal of Neuroscience, 2006
- The role of the inferior frontal junction area in cognitive controlTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2005
- The Control of Voluntary Eye Movements: New PerspectivesThe Neuroscientist, 2005
- Maintenance of Spatial and Motor Codes during Oculomotor Delayed Response TasksJournal of Neuroscience, 2004
- Functional Parcellation of Attentional Control Regions of the BrainJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience, 2004
- Control of goal-directed and stimulus-driven attention in the brainNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
- Intentional Maps in Posterior Parietal CortexAnnual Review of Neuroscience, 2002
- Location- or Feature-Based Targeting of Peripheral AttentionNeuroImage, 2001
- Primate supplementary eye field: I. Comparative aspects of mesencephalic and pontine connectionsJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1990