Literature DB >> 16890523

Concurrent TMS-fMRI and psychophysics reveal frontal influences on human retinotopic visual cortex.

Christian C Ruff1, Felix Blankenburg, Otto Bjoertomt, Sven Bestmann, Elliot Freeman, John-Dylan Haynes, Geraint Rees, Oliver Josephs, Ralf Deichmann, Jon Driver.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Regions in human frontal cortex may have modulatory top-down influences on retinotopic visual cortex, but to date neuroimaging methods have only been able to provide indirect evidence for such functional interactions between remote but interconnected brain regions. Here we combined transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) with concurrent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), plus psychophysics, to show that stimulation of the right human frontal eye-field (FEF) produced a characteristic topographic pattern of activity changes in retinotopic visual areas V1-V4, with functional consequences for visual perception.
RESULTS: FEF TMS led to activity increases for retinotopic representations of the peripheral visual field, but to activity decreases for the central field, in areas V1-V4. These frontal influences on visual cortex occurred in a top-down manner, independently of visual input. TMS of a control site (vertex) did not elicit such visual modulations, and saccades, blinks, or pupil dilation could not account for our results. Finally, the effects of FEF TMS on activity in retinotopic visual cortex led to a behavioral prediction that we confirmed psychophysically by showing that TMS of the frontal site (again compared with vertex) enhanced perceived contrast for peripheral relative to central visual stimuli.
CONCLUSIONS: Our results provide causal evidence that circuits originating in the human FEF can modulate activity in retinotopic visual cortex, in a manner that differentiates the central and peripheral visual field, with functional consequences for perception. More generally, our study illustrates how the new approach of concurrent TMS-fMRI can now reveal causal interactions between remote but interconnected areas of the human brain.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16890523     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2006.06.057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  199 in total

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5.  Causal evidence for frontal involvement in memory target maintenance by posterior brain areas during distracter interference of visual working memory.

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7.  The effects of electrical microstimulation on cortical signal propagation.

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8.  Stimulation of the frontal eye field reveals persistent effective connectivity after controlled behavior.

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9.  Preparatory activations across a distributed cortical network determine production of express saccades in humans.

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Review 10.  Influence of early attentional modulation on working memory.

Authors:  Adam Gazzaley
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2010-12-22       Impact factor: 3.139

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