Examined neural mechanisms involved in the modulation of attention in visual processing in extrastriate cortex. The assumption is made that multiple stimuli activate competing populations of neurons and that attention biases this competition in favor of the attended stimulus. Attention has a more limited effect on the neuronal response to a single stimulus. To test this interpretation, we measured the responses of neurons in macaque areas V2 and V4 using a behavioral paradigm that allowed us to isolate automatic sensory processing mechanisms from attentional effects. First, we measured each cell's response to a single stimulus presented alone inside the receptive field or paired with a second receptive field stimulus, while the monkey attended to a location outside the receptive field. Adding the second stimulus typically caused the neuron's response to move toward the response that was elicited by the second stimulus alone. Then, we directed the monkey's attention to one element of the pair. This drove the neuron's response toward the response elicited when the attended stimulus appeared alone. Findings are consistent with the idea that attention biases competitive interactions among neurons, causing them to respond primarily to the attended stimulus. ((c) 1999 APA/PsycINFO, all rights reserved)

Competitive mechanisms subserve attention in macaque areas V2 and V4

Chelazzi L.;
1999-01-01

Abstract

Examined neural mechanisms involved in the modulation of attention in visual processing in extrastriate cortex. The assumption is made that multiple stimuli activate competing populations of neurons and that attention biases this competition in favor of the attended stimulus. Attention has a more limited effect on the neuronal response to a single stimulus. To test this interpretation, we measured the responses of neurons in macaque areas V2 and V4 using a behavioral paradigm that allowed us to isolate automatic sensory processing mechanisms from attentional effects. First, we measured each cell's response to a single stimulus presented alone inside the receptive field or paired with a second receptive field stimulus, while the monkey attended to a location outside the receptive field. Adding the second stimulus typically caused the neuron's response to move toward the response that was elicited by the second stimulus alone. Then, we directed the monkey's attention to one element of the pair. This drove the neuron's response toward the response elicited when the attended stimulus appeared alone. Findings are consistent with the idea that attention biases competitive interactions among neurons, causing them to respond primarily to the attended stimulus. ((c) 1999 APA/PsycINFO, all rights reserved)
1999
Extrastriate cortex; Model; Monkey; Spatial attention; V2; V4;
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11562/301601
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