Additive effects of attention and stimulus contrast in primary visual cortex
Additive effects of attention and stimulus contrast in primary visual cortex
Previous studies have proposed a variety of mechanisms by which attention influences neuronal activity. Here we investigated the mechanisms of attention in the striate cortex of monkeys performing a spatial or an object-based attention task at various stimulus contrasts and compared neuronal contrast response functions with and without attention. Our data are best described by an “additive” interaction: The influence of attention on the neuronal response is relatively independent of the stimulus contrast, at least when the stimulus has enough contrast to become visible. This shows that attention adds to the neuronal responses in a largely contrast invariant manner. These data support recent functional magnetic resonance imaging studies and suggest that feedback from higher areas exerts a constant attentional drive that is mostly task not stimulus driven.
2970–2981
Thiele, A.
ee76e146-18ac-4bed-bdc8-22741c36905a
Pooresmaeili, A.
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Delicato, L. S.
06aae6d8-1ba3-4813-a1ee-eab654afdc16
Herrero, J. L.
69f35096-e8e4-481b-902f-afe4425a3145
Roelfsema, P. R.
d0215095-2ffb-4b70-83d5-11e7be75a31a
April 2009
Thiele, A.
ee76e146-18ac-4bed-bdc8-22741c36905a
Pooresmaeili, A.
319b6aed-8454-4ad2-b16e-8fadfdfd2e53
Delicato, L. S.
06aae6d8-1ba3-4813-a1ee-eab654afdc16
Herrero, J. L.
69f35096-e8e4-481b-902f-afe4425a3145
Roelfsema, P. R.
d0215095-2ffb-4b70-83d5-11e7be75a31a
Thiele, A., Pooresmaeili, A., Delicato, L. S., Herrero, J. L. and Roelfsema, P. R.
(2009)
Additive effects of attention and stimulus contrast in primary visual cortex.
Cerebral Cortex, 19 (12), .
(doi:10.1093/cercor/bhp070).
Abstract
Previous studies have proposed a variety of mechanisms by which attention influences neuronal activity. Here we investigated the mechanisms of attention in the striate cortex of monkeys performing a spatial or an object-based attention task at various stimulus contrasts and compared neuronal contrast response functions with and without attention. Our data are best described by an “additive” interaction: The influence of attention on the neuronal response is relatively independent of the stimulus contrast, at least when the stimulus has enough contrast to become visible. This shows that attention adds to the neuronal responses in a largely contrast invariant manner. These data support recent functional magnetic resonance imaging studies and suggest that feedback from higher areas exerts a constant attentional drive that is mostly task not stimulus driven.
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Published date: April 2009
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Local EPrints ID: 481493
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481493
ISSN: 1047-3211
PURE UUID: 3301cedc-3422-407f-82d7-24f1e7ba52ed
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Date deposited: 30 Aug 2023 16:34
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:18
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Author:
A. Thiele
Author:
A. Pooresmaeili
Author:
L. S. Delicato
Author:
J. L. Herrero
Author:
P. R. Roelfsema
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