The cost of attentional reorienting on conscious visual perception: an MEG study

Author:

Spagna Alfredo12,Bayle Dimitri J3,Romeo Zaira4,Seidel-Malkinson Tal2,Liu Jianghao2,Yahia-Cherif Lydia2,Chica Ana B5,Bartolomeo Paolo2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology , Columbia University in the City of New York, New York, NY 10027, USA

2. Sorbonne Université , Inserm U 1127, CNRS UMR 7225, Paris Brain Institute, ICM, Hôpital de la Pitié-Salpêtrière, 75013 Paris, France

3. Licae Lab , Université Paris Nanterre, 92001 Nanterre, France

4. Department of General Psychology , University of Padova, 35131 Padova, Italy

5. Department of Experimental Psychology; Mind , Brain, and Behavior Research Center (CIMCYC), University of Granada, 18071 Granada, Spain

Abstract

Abstract How do attentional networks influence conscious perception? To answer this question, we used magnetoencephalography in human participants and assessed the effects of spatially nonpredictive or predictive supra-threshold peripheral cues on the conscious perception of near-threshold Gabors. Three main results emerged. (i) As compared with invalid cues, both nonpredictive and predictive valid cues increased conscious detection. Yet, only predictive cues shifted the response criterion toward a more liberal decision (i.e. willingness to report the presence of a target under conditions of greater perceptual uncertainty) and affected target contrast leading to 50% detections. (ii) Conscious perception following valid predictive cues was associated to enhanced activity in frontoparietal networks. These responses were lateralized to the left hemisphere during attentional orienting and to the right hemisphere during target processing. The involvement of frontoparietal networks occurred earlier in valid than in invalid trials, a possible neural marker of the cost of re-orienting attention. (iii) When detected targets were preceded by invalid predictive cues, and thus reorienting to the target was required, neural responses occurred in left hemisphere temporo-occipital regions during attentional orienting, and in right hemisphere anterior insular and temporo-occipital regions during target processing. These results confirm and specify the role of frontoparietal networks in modulating conscious processing and detail how invalid orienting of spatial attention disrupts conscious processing.

Funder

Agence Nationale de la Recherche

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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