Publication | Open Access
Blood oxygenation level-dependent contrast response functions identify mechanisms of covert attention in early visual areas
128
Citations
43
References
2008
Year
Brain FunctionAffective NeuroscienceSelective AttentionEarly Visual AreasAttentionVisual Cognitive NeurosciencePsychologySocial SciencesEarly VisionVisual CognitionCovert AttentionContrast GainEntire Attention BlockCognitive NeuroscienceCognitive ScienceBlindsightOphthalmologyNeuroimagingVision ResearchVisual ProcessingBrain ImagingVisual FunctionCognitive PerformanceNeurophysiologyEye TrackingNeuroscienceMedicine
Covert attention can lead to improved performance in perceptual tasks. The neural and functional mechanisms of covert attention are still under investigation. Using both rapid event-related and mixed designs, we measured the blood oxygenation level-dependent functional MRI contrast response functions over the full range of contrast (0-100%) in the retinotopically defined early visual areas (V1, V2, V3, V3A, and V4) in humans. Covert attention increased both the baseline activities and contrast gains in the five cortical areas. The effect on baseline can be decomposed into a transient trial-by-trial component and a component across an entire attention block. On average, increase in contrast gain accounted for approximately 88.0%, 28.5%, 12.7%, 35.9%, and 25.2% of the trial-by-trial effects of attention in the five areas, respectively, and 22.2%, 12.8%, 7.4%, 19.7%, and 17.3% of the total effects of attention in those areas, consistent with single-unit findings in V4 and MT. The results provide strong evidence for a stimulus enhancement mechanism of attention as demonstrated in various behavioral studies.
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