The Role of Stimulus Salience and Attentional Capture Across the Neural Hierarchy in a Stop-Signal Task
Open Access
- 17 October 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Public Library of Science (PLoS) in PLOS ONE
- Vol. 6 (10), e26386
- https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026386
Abstract
Inhibitory motor control is a core function of cognitive control. Evidence from diverse experimental approaches has linked this function to a mostly right-lateralized network of cortical and subcortical areas, wherein a signal from the frontal cortex to the basal ganglia is believed to trigger motor-response cancellation. Recently, however, it has been recognized that in the context of typical motor-control paradigms those processes related to actual response inhibition and those related to the attentional processing of the relevant stimuli are highly interrelated and thus difficult to distinguish. Here, we used fMRI and a modified Stop-signal task to specifically examine the role of perceptual and attentional processes triggered by the different stimuli in such tasks, thus seeking to further distinguish other cognitive processes that may precede or otherwise accompany the implementation of response inhibition. In order to establish which brain areas respond to sensory stimulation differences by rare Stop-stimuli, as well as to the associated attentional capture that these may trigger irrespective of their task-relevance, we compared brain activity evoked by Stop-trials to that evoked by Go-trials in task blocks where Stop-stimuli were to be ignored. In addition, region-of-interest analyses comparing the responses to these task-irrelevant Stop-trials, with those to typical relevant Stop-trials, identified separable activity profiles as a function of the task-relevance of the Stop-signal. While occipital areas were mostly blind to the task-relevance of Stop-stimuli, activity in temporo-parietal areas dissociated between task-irrelevant and task-relevant ones. Activity profiles in frontal areas, in turn, were activated mainly by task-relevant Stop-trials, presumably reflecting a combination of triggered top-down attentional influences and inhibitory motor-control processes.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- From Reactive to Proactive and Selective Control: Developing a Richer Model for Stopping Inappropriate ResponsesBiological Psychiatry, 2010
- Pinning down response inhibition in the brain — Conjunction analyses of the Stop-signal taskNeuroImage, 2010
- Saliency, switching, attention and control: a network model of insula functionBrain Structure and Function, 2010
- Role of the anterior insula in task-level control and focal attentionBrain Structure and Function, 2010
- The role of the right inferior frontal gyrus: inhibition and attentional controlNeuroImage, 2010
- Poor response inhibition: At the nexus between substance abuse and attention deficit/hyperactivity disorderNeuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2009
- Circular analysis in systems neuroscience: the dangers of double dippingNature Neuroscience, 2009
- Cortical activity during manual response inhibition guided by color and orientation cuesBrain Research, 2009
- At the heart of the ventral attention system: The right anterior insulaHuman Brain Mapping, 2008
- Response inhibition in the stop-signal paradigmTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2008