Neural correlates of conscious perception in the attentional blink
Neural correlates of conscious perception in the attentional blink
If attending to a target in a rapid stream of visual stimuli within the next 400 ms or so, a second target in the stream is frequently not detected by an observer. This so-called attentional blink can provide a comparison of neural signals elicited by identical stimuli that, in one condition, reach conscious awareness and, in the other, fail to be selected for awareness. In the present study, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), differences of neural activation were studied in an attentional blink experiment in order to identify brain regions putatively involved in controlling the access of information to consciousness. Subjects viewed a rapid stream of black letters in which the second target (T2) was either presented within or outside the attentional blink period, or not at all. We observed an increase in activation for detected as compared to missed T2 presented during the attentional blink in frontal and parietal cortices. In contrast, in occipitotemporal regions activation was increased for missed as compared to detected T2. Furthermore, in several frontal and parietal areas, missed targets were associated with increased activity if compared to the condition in which no second target was presented. Finally, a selective decrease in activation for detected T2 presented during the attentional blink was observed in areas associated with emotional and predominantly automatic processing. While activations in occipitotemporal regions might mainly reflect duration of attentive search, the frontoparietal areas seem to be involved in a highly distributed network controlling visual awareness.
consciousness, perception, brain
704-714
Kranczioch, Cornelia
c5d9d3fb-2b54-4ae0-85dd-fb1ae11aea4f
Debener, Stefan
e6bf9143-09a8-45c0-8536-3564885375d4
Schwarzbach, Jens
a53566fd-dad3-400f-ae55-369768aa0adc
Goebel, Rainer
3d3b188d-fb96-42a7-925c-6dda7504fb04
Engel, Andreas K.
4c9e2742-c147-46d6-b750-bcab4b5baf34
2005
Kranczioch, Cornelia
c5d9d3fb-2b54-4ae0-85dd-fb1ae11aea4f
Debener, Stefan
e6bf9143-09a8-45c0-8536-3564885375d4
Schwarzbach, Jens
a53566fd-dad3-400f-ae55-369768aa0adc
Goebel, Rainer
3d3b188d-fb96-42a7-925c-6dda7504fb04
Engel, Andreas K.
4c9e2742-c147-46d6-b750-bcab4b5baf34
Kranczioch, Cornelia, Debener, Stefan, Schwarzbach, Jens, Goebel, Rainer and Engel, Andreas K.
(2005)
Neural correlates of conscious perception in the attentional blink.
NeuroImage, 24 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2004.09.024).
Abstract
If attending to a target in a rapid stream of visual stimuli within the next 400 ms or so, a second target in the stream is frequently not detected by an observer. This so-called attentional blink can provide a comparison of neural signals elicited by identical stimuli that, in one condition, reach conscious awareness and, in the other, fail to be selected for awareness. In the present study, using event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), differences of neural activation were studied in an attentional blink experiment in order to identify brain regions putatively involved in controlling the access of information to consciousness. Subjects viewed a rapid stream of black letters in which the second target (T2) was either presented within or outside the attentional blink period, or not at all. We observed an increase in activation for detected as compared to missed T2 presented during the attentional blink in frontal and parietal cortices. In contrast, in occipitotemporal regions activation was increased for missed as compared to detected T2. Furthermore, in several frontal and parietal areas, missed targets were associated with increased activity if compared to the condition in which no second target was presented. Finally, a selective decrease in activation for detected T2 presented during the attentional blink was observed in areas associated with emotional and predominantly automatic processing. While activations in occipitotemporal regions might mainly reflect duration of attentive search, the frontoparietal areas seem to be involved in a highly distributed network controlling visual awareness.
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Published date: 2005
Keywords:
consciousness, perception, brain
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Local EPrints ID: 27628
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/27628
PURE UUID: 29cf65bd-9dad-4921-9c93-ef1ff9381e9d
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Date deposited: 25 Apr 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 07:20
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Contributors
Author:
Cornelia Kranczioch
Author:
Stefan Debener
Author:
Jens Schwarzbach
Author:
Rainer Goebel
Author:
Andreas K. Engel
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