Author:
Phangwiwat Tanagrit,Phunchongharn Phond,Wongsawat Yodchanan,Chatnuntawech Itthi,Wang Sisi,Chunharas Chaipat,Sprague Thomas C.,Woodman Geoffrey F.,Itthipuripat Sirawaj
Abstract
AbstractIn primates, foveal and peripheral vision have distinct neural architectures and functions. However, it has been debated if selective attention operates via the same or different neural mechanisms across eccentricities. We tested these alternative accounts by examining the effects of selective attention on the steady-state visually evoked potential (SSVEP) and the fronto-parietal signal measured via EEG from human subjects performing a sustained visuospatial attention task. With a negligible level of eye movements, both SSVEP and SND exhibited the heterogeneous patterns of attentional modulations across eccentricities. Specifically, the attentional modulations of these signals peaked at the parafoveal locations and such modulations wore off as visual stimuli appeared closer to the fovea or further away towards the periphery. However, with a relatively higher level of eye movements, the heterogeneous patterns of attentional modulations of these neural signals were less robust. These data demonstrate that the top-down influence of covert visuospatial attention on early sensory processing in human cortex depends on eccentricity and the level of saccadic responses. Taken together, the results suggest that sustained visuospatial attention operates differently across different eccentric locations, providing new understanding of how attention augments sensory representations regardless of where the attended stimulus appears.
Funder
KMUTT Partnering initiative
The National Research Council of Thailand
Program Management Unit for Human Resources and Institutional Development, Research and Innovation
Research and Innovation for Sustainability Center, Magnolia Quality Development Corporation Limited
National Eye Institute
National Institute of Mental Health
The Thailand Science Research and Innovation (TSRI) Basic Research Fund
Asahi Glass Foundation
startup fund from King Mongkut’s University of Technology Thonburi
National Science and Technology Development Agency
KMUTT’s Frontier Research Unit Grant for Neuroscience Center for Research and Innovation
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献