将注意力转移到预期的视觉目标会改变人体钙化皮层α波段振荡活动的水平

Noriko Yamagishi , Naokazu Goda , Daniel E. Callan , Stephen J. Anderson , Mitsuo Kawato
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引用次数: 117

摘要

与注意力从一个位置转移到另一个位置的自上而下控制过程相关的神经元操作涉及皮质区域网络,它们的影响被认为是视觉感知的基础。然而,这些手术在主要视觉区域的范围和性质尚不清楚。在本文中,我们使用脑磁图(MEG)结合磁共振成像(MRI)来确定在视觉刺激开始之前,早期视觉皮层内的神经元活动是否受到隐蔽注意力转移的影响。时间/频率分析用于确定该活动的性质。我们的研究结果表明,将注意力转移到预期的视觉目标会导致晚发性(提示后600毫秒)α活动的抑制,这种抑制一直持续到目标出现。独立分量分析(ICA)和偶极源模型证实了我们观察到的神经元变化起源于钙化皮层内部。我们的结果进一步表明,α活动的幅度变化是诱导的,而不是诱发的(即,与提示注意力任务不相锁定)。我们认为,在目标开始之前,α的减少可能有助于为早期视觉皮层接收传入的感觉信息做好准备。我们得出的结论是,注意力转移通过改变自发α节律的振幅来影响人类calcarine皮层内的活动,并且随着这些振荡活动的局部变化,随后的视觉输入与注意力参与的调制也随之发生。
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Attentional shifts towards an expected visual target alter the level of alpha-band oscillatory activity in the human calcarine cortex

Neuronal operations associated with the top–down control process of shifting attention from one locus to another involve a network of cortical regions, and their influence is deemed fundamental to visual perception. However, the extent and nature of these operations within primary visual areas are unknown. In this paper, we used magnetoencephalography (MEG) in combination with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to determine whether, prior to the onset of a visual stimulus, neuronal activity within early visual cortex is affected by covert attentional shifts. Time/frequency analyses were used to identify the nature of this activity. Our results show that shifting attention towards an expected visual target results in a late-onset (600 ms postcue onset) depression of alpha activity which persists until the appearance of the target. Independent component analysis (ICA) and dipolar source modeling confirmed that the neuronal changes we observed originated from within the calcarine cortex. Our results further show that the amplitude changes in alpha activity were induced not evoked (i.e., not phase-locked to the cued attentional task). We argue that the decrease in alpha prior to the onset of the target may serve to prime the early visual cortex for incoming sensory information. We conclude that attentional shifts affect activity within the human calcarine cortex by altering the amplitude of spontaneous alpha rhythms and that subsequent modulation of visual input with attentional engagement follows as a consequence of these localized changes in oscillatory activity.

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