Publication | Open Access
Attentional selection of location and modality in vision and touch modulates low-frequency activity in associated sensory cortices
109
Citations
34
References
2012
Year
Selective AttentionAttentionSensory SystemsVisual Cognitive NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesEarly VisionVisual CognitionSensory NeuroscienceCognitive ElectrophysiologyCognitive NeuroscienceMultisensory IntegrationAssociated Sensory CorticesSensorimotor ControlHealth SciencesCognitive ScienceBrain OscillationsSensorimotor IntegrationVisual ProcessingSpatial AttentionSystems NeuroscienceVisual FunctionSensorimotor TransformationNeuroscienceAttentional Selection
Selective attention allows us to focus on particular sensory modalities and locations. Relatively little is known about how attention to a sensory modality may relate to selection of other features, such as spatial location, in terms of brain oscillations, although it has been proposed that low-frequency modulation (α- and β-bands) may be key. Here, we investigated how attention to space (left or right) and attention to modality (vision or touch) affect ongoing low-frequency oscillatory brain activity over human sensory cortex. Magnetoencephalography was recorded while participants performed a visual or tactile task. In different blocks, touch or vision was task-relevant, whereas spatial attention was cued to the left or right on each trial. Attending to one or other modality suppressed α-oscillations over the corresponding sensory cortex. Spatial attention led to reduced α-oscillations over both sensorimotor and occipital cortex contralateral to the attended location in the cue-target interval, when either modality was task-relevant. Even modality-selective sensors also showed spatial-attention effects for both modalities. The visual and sensorimotor results were generally highly convergent, yet, although attention effects in occipital cortex were dominant in the α-band, in sensorimotor cortex, these were also clearly present in the β-band. These results extend previous findings that spatial attention can operate in a multimodal fashion and indicate that attention to space and modality both rely on similar mechanisms that modulate low-frequency oscillations.
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