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Published April 1999 | public
Journal Article

Involvement of striate and extrastriate visual cortical areas in spatial attention

Abstract

We investigated the cortical mechanisms of visual-spatial attention while subjects discriminated patterned targets within distractor arrays. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to map the boundaries of retinotopic visual areas and to localize attention-related changes in neural activity within several of those areas, including primary visual (striate) cortex. Event-related potentials (ERPs) and modeling of their neural sources, however, indicated that the initial sensory input to striate cortex at 50−55 milliseconds after the stimulus was not modulated by attention. The earliest facilitation of attended signals was observed in extrastriate visual areas, at 70−75 milliseconds. We hypothesize that the striate cortex modulation found with fMRI may represent a delayed, re-entrant feedback from higher visual areas or a sustained biasing of striate cortical neurons during attention. ERP recordings provide critical temporal information for analyzing the functional neuroanatomy of visual attention.

Additional Information

© 1999 Nature Publishing Group. Received 18 October 1998; accepted 18 February 1999. We thank Matt Marlow, Cecelia Kemper and Carlos Nava for technical assistance. Supported by grants from NIMH (MH25594), ONR (N00014-93-0942), NIH (NS36722), HMRI, and from the Deutsch Forschungsgemeinschaft (HE 1531/3).

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023