scholarly journals Top-Down Control of Human Visual Cortex by Frontal and Parietal Cortex in Anticipatory Visual Spatial Attention

2008 ◽  
Vol 28 (40) ◽  
pp. 10056-10061 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Bressler ◽  
W. Tang ◽  
C. M. Sylvester ◽  
G. L. Shulman ◽  
M. Corbetta
Author(s):  
Anna C. (Kia) Nobre ◽  
M-Marsel Mesulam

Selective attention is essential for all aspects of cognition. Using the paradigmatic case of visual spatial attention, we present a theoretical account proposing the flexible control of attention through coordinated activity across a large-scale network of brain areas. It reviews evidence supporting top-down control of visual spatial attention by a distributed network, and describes principles emerging from a network approach. Stepping beyond the paradigm of visual spatial attention, we consider attentional control mechanisms more broadly. The chapter suggests that top-down biasing mechanisms originate from multiple sources and can be of several types, carrying information about receptive-field properties such as spatial locations or features of items; but also carrying information about properties that are not easily mapped onto receptive fields, such as the meanings or timings of items. The chapter considers how selective biases can operate on multiple slates of information processing, not restricted to the immediate sensory-motor stream, but also operating within internalized, short-term and long-term memory representations. Selective attention appears to be a general property of information processing systems rather than an independent domain within our cognitive make-up.


NeuroImage ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 47 ◽  
pp. S66
Author(s):  
JB Ewen ◽  
DM Caggiano ◽  
BM Lakshmanan ◽  
H Rosen ◽  
S Yantis

2009 ◽  
Vol 9 (13) ◽  
pp. 18-18 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Z. Lauritzen ◽  
M. D'Esposito ◽  
D. J. Heeger ◽  
M. A. Silver

2001 ◽  
Vol 4 (9) ◽  
pp. 953-957 ◽  
Author(s):  
Claus C. Hilgetag ◽  
Hugo Théoret ◽  
Alvaro Pascual-Leone

Author(s):  
Diane M. Beck ◽  
Sabine Kastner

Spatial attention has been studied for over a half a century. Early behavioural work showed that attending to a location improves performance on a variety of tasks. Since then substantial progress has been made on understanding the neural mechanisms underlying these effects. This chapter reviews the neuroimaging literature, as well as related behavioural and single-cell physiology studies, on visual spatial attention. In particular, the chapter frames much of the work in the context of the biased competition theory of attention, which argues that a primary mechanism of attention is to bias competition among stimuli in the visual cortex in favour of an attended stimulus that, as a result, receives enhanced processing to guide behaviour. Accordingly, the authors have organized this chapter into two related sections. The first summarizes the effects of attention in the visual cortex and thalamus, the so-called ‘site’ of attention. The second explores the relationship between attention and fronto-parietal mechanisms which are thought to be the ‘source’ of the biasing signals exerted on the visual cortex.


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