Literature DB >> 11960805

The role of the lateral intraparietal area of the monkey in the generation of saccades and visuospatial attention.

Michael E Goldberg1, James Bisley, Keith D Powell, Jacqueline Gottlieb, Makoto Kusunoki.   

Abstract

The brain cannot monitor or react towards the entire world at a given time. Instead, using the process of attention, it selects objects in the world for further analysis. Neuronal activity in the monkey intraparietal area has the properties appropriate for a neuronal substrate of attention: instead of all objects being represented in the parietal cortex, only salient objects are. Such objects can be salient because of their physical properties (recently flashed objects or moving objects) or because they can be made important to the animal by virtue of a task. Although lateral intraparietal area (LIP) neurons respond through the delay period of a memory-guided saccade, they also respond in an enhanced manner to distractors flashed during the delay period of a memory-guided saccade being generated to a position outside the receptive field. This activity parallels the monkey's psychophysical attentional process: attention is ordinarily pinned at the goal of a memory-guided saccade, but it shifts briefly to the locus of a task-irrelevant distractor flashed briefly during the delay period and then returns to the goal. Although neurons in LIP have been implicated as being directly involved in the generation of saccadic eye movements, their activity does not predict where, when, or if a saccade will occur. The ensemble of activity in LIP, however, does accurately describe the locus of attention.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2002        PMID: 11960805     DOI: 10.1111/j.1749-6632.2002.tb02820.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci        ISSN: 0077-8923            Impact factor:   5.691


  45 in total

1.  Neural representation during visually guided reaching in macaque posterior parietal cortex.

Authors:  Barbara Heider; Anushree Karnik; Nirmala Ramalingam; Ralph M Siegel
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2010-09-15       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 2.  Common neural mechanisms supporting spatial working memory, attention and motor intention.

Authors:  Akiko Ikkai; Clayton E Curtis
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2010-12-21       Impact factor: 3.139

3.  Simultaneous representation of saccade targets and visual onsets in monkey lateral intraparietal area.

Authors:  Jacqueline Gottlieb; Makoto Kusunoki; Michael E Goldberg
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2004-12-22       Impact factor: 5.357

4.  Topographic maps of visual spatial attention in human parietal cortex.

Authors:  Michael A Silver; David Ress; David J Heeger
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2005-04-07       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 5.  Working memory as an emergent property of the mind and brain.

Authors:  B R Postle
Journal:  Neuroscience       Date:  2005-12-01       Impact factor: 3.590

Review 6.  How the brain blinks: towards a neurocognitive model of the attentional blink.

Authors:  Bernhard Hommel; Klaus Kessler; Frank Schmitz; Joachim Gross; Elkan Akyürek; Kimron Shapiro; Alfons Schnitzler
Journal:  Psychol Res       Date:  2005-10-20

7.  Neuroanatomical dissociation between bottom-up and top-down processes of visuospatial selective attention.

Authors:  Britta Hahn; Thomas J Ross; Elliot A Stein
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2006-06-06       Impact factor: 6.556

8.  Responses of neurons in the lateral intraparietal area to central visual cues.

Authors:  Brian E Russ; Amy M Kim; Karilyn L Abrahamsen; Ruwan Kiringoda; Yale E Cohen
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2006-10       Impact factor: 1.972

9.  Using a compound gain field to compute a reach plan.

Authors:  Steve W C Chang; Charalampos Papadimitriou; Lawrence H Snyder
Journal:  Neuron       Date:  2009-12-10       Impact factor: 17.173

10.  Memory-guided saccade processing in visual form agnosia (patient DF).

Authors:  Stéphanie Rossit; Larissa Szymanek; Stephen H Butler; Monika Harvey
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 1.972

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.