Literature DB >> 1374703

Intermodal selective attention. I. Effects on event-related potentials to lateralized auditory and visual stimuli.

D L Woods1, K Alho, A Algazi.   

Abstract

The effects of intermodal selective attention on event-related brain potentials (ERPs) were examined in 2 experiments. In experiment 1, auditory ERPs were compared (1) when subjects responded to easy and difficult-to-detect target tones in sequences of tone bursts; and (2) when they ignored the same auditory sequences and played a demanding video game. In experiment 2, auditory ERPs to tone bursts and visual ERPs to vertical line gratings were compared as subjects responded to difficult-to-detect targets in one modality or the other. Attention to auditory stimuli resulted in biphasic enhancements in auditory ERPs, the Nda (negative auditory difference wave, latency 120-160 msec) and the Pda (positive auditory difference wave, latency 200-240 msec) waves. These had longer latencies and somewhat different scalp distributions than N1 and P2 components evoked by non-attended tones. The Nda and Pda could be contrasted with the monophasic processing negativities typically found in dichotic selective attention tasks. Nda amplitudes were larger for difficult-to-detect targets (closely resembling standards) than for standards themselves, but no Ndas were recorded to highly deviant targets. Deviant auditory stimuli evoked mismatch negativities (MMNs) that persisted during visual attention. MMN amplitudes to difficult-to-detect deviants were enlarged with attention, but no change was found in MMN amplitudes to easy-to-detect deviants. In experiment 2 intermodal attention was associated with biphasic changes in visual ERPs over the posterior scalp: the occipital Pdv (100-130 msec), and contralateral-temporal Ndv (120-320 msec) deflections. Deviant visual stimuli also elicited mismatch negativity/N2b components, largest over the inferotemporal cortex contralateral to the stimulated visual field. Like the auditory MMN, the MMN increased in amplitude with attention, but it was also evident during attend auditory conditions. The results suggest that sustained, intermodal attention depends primarily in processing modulations in modality-specific cortex. We found no evidence of the participation of modality non-specific cortex. This excludes the possibility that intermodal attention depends on a single, supramodal attention system. The relatively long latency of intermodal effects suggests that they may depend on the reafferent (top down) modulation, and do not index "template matching" operations.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1374703     DOI: 10.1016/0013-4694(92)90004-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0013-4694


  39 in total

1.  Aging affects hemispheric asymmetry in the neural representation of speech sounds.

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2.  Electroencephalography (EEG) and event-related potentials (ERPs) with human participants.

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3.  Biasing the brain's attentional set: I. cue driven deployments of intersensory selective attention.

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4.  Biasing the brain's attentional set: II. effects of selective intersensory attentional deployments on subsequent sensory processing.

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5.  Visual speech speeds up the neural processing of auditory speech.

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6.  Attentional modulation in the detection of irrelevant deviance: a simultaneous ERP/fMRI study.

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7.  Effects of visual attentional load on low-level auditory scene analysis.

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Review 8.  Influence of cognitive control and mismatch on the N2 component of the ERP: a review.

Authors:  Jonathan R Folstein; Cyma Van Petten
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2007-09-10       Impact factor: 4.016

9.  Early stages of melody processing: stimulus-sequence and task-dependent neuronal activity in monkey auditory cortical fields A1 and R.

Authors:  Pingbo Yin; Mortimer Mishkin; Mitchell Sutter; Jonathan B Fritz
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2008-10-08       Impact factor: 2.714

10.  Sustained selective intermodal attention modulates processing of language-like stimuli.

Authors:  Christian Keitel; Erich Schröger; Katja Saupe; Matthias M Müller
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  2011-04-19       Impact factor: 1.972

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