Literature DB >> 10700263

Voluntary orienting is dissociated from target detection in human posterior parietal cortex.

M Corbetta1, J M Kincade, J M Ollinger, M P McAvoy, G L Shulman.   

Abstract

Human ability to attend to visual stimuli based on their spatial locations requires the parietal cortex. One hypothesis maintains that parietal cortex controls the voluntary orienting of attention toward a location of interest. Another hypothesis emphasizes its role in reorienting attention toward visual targets appearing at unattended locations. Here, using event-related functional magnetic resonance (ER-fMRI), we show that distinct parietal regions mediated these different attentional processes. Cortical activation occurred primarily in the intraparietal sulcus when a location was attended before visual-target presentation, but in the right temporoparietal junction when the target was detected, particularly at an unattended location.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10700263     DOI: 10.1038/73009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Neurosci        ISSN: 1097-6256            Impact factor:   24.884


  510 in total

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Review 8.  Neuroimaging and behavior: probing brain behavior relationships in the 21st century.

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