Literature DB >> 17610592

Orienting and maintenance of spatial attention in audition and vision: an event-related brain potential study.

Juha Salmi1, Teemu Rinne, Alexander Degerman, Kimmo Alho.   

Abstract

We examined the effects of orienting and maintenance of attention on performance and event-related brain potentials (ERPs) in audition and vision. Our subjects selectively attended to sounds or pictures in one location (Maintenance of attention) or alternated the focus of their auditory or visual attention between left and right locations (Orienting of attention) in order to detect and press a response button to infrequent targets among the attended stimuli. Reaction times were longer in the Auditory Orienting condition and hit rates were lower and false alarm rates higher in the Visual Orienting condition than in the corresponding Maintenance conditions. Comparison of ERPs to the attended and unattended stimuli in the Auditory and Visual Orienting and Maintenance conditions revealed attention-related modulations of ERPs. In each modality, ERPs to attended stimuli were negatively displaced in relation to unattended stimuli at 100-250 ms from stimulus onset. These negative differences (Nds) showed modality-specific distributions and they were larger over the hemisphere contralateral to the attended sounds and pictures than over the ipsilateral hemisphere. Moreover, the Nd was larger in the Auditory Orienting condition than in the Auditory Maintenance condition, while no such difference was observed in the visual modality. In addition to the Nd, attended visual stimuli elicited a late positive response (LPR) in both Orienting and Maintenance conditions. In contrast to our recent functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study employing the same experimental paradigm and indicating orienting-related activity in the frontal and parietal cortices, no ERP responses specifically related to orienting were found in either modality.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17610592     DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2007.05616.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  7 in total

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Authors:  Jennifer K Bizley; Yale E Cohen
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2013-10       Impact factor: 34.870

Review 2.  Using neuroimaging to understand the cortical mechanisms of auditory selective attention.

Authors:  Adrian K C Lee; Eric Larson; Ross K Maddox; Barbara G Shinn-Cunningham
Journal:  Hear Res       Date:  2013-07-09       Impact factor: 3.208

3.  Dynamic oscillatory processes governing cued orienting and allocation of auditory attention.

Authors:  Jyrki Ahveninen; Samantha Huang; John W Belliveau; Wei-Tang Chang; Matti Hämäläinen
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2013-08-05       Impact factor: 3.225

4.  Transient human auditory cortex activation during volitional attention shifting.

Authors:  Christian Harm Uhlig; Alexander Gutschalk
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-03-08       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  The Effects of Bilateral and Ipsilateral Auditory Stimuli on the Subcomponents of Visual Attention.

Authors:  Jing Fu; Xuanru Guo; Xiaoyu Tang; Aijun Wang; Ming Zhang; Yulin Gao; Takeharu Seno
Journal:  Iperception       Date:  2021-12-23

6.  Dynamics of distraction: competition among auditory streams modulates gain and disrupts inter-trial phase coherence in the human electroencephalogram.

Authors:  Karla D Ponjavic-Conte; Dillon A Hambrook; Sebastian Pavlovic; Matthew S Tata
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-01-10       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Attention effects on the processing of task-relevant and task-irrelevant speech sounds and letters.

Authors:  Maria Mittag; Karina Inauri; Tatu Huovilainen; Miika Leminen; Emma Salo; Teemu Rinne; Teija Kujala; Kimmo Alho
Journal:  Front Neurosci       Date:  2013-12-03       Impact factor: 4.677

  7 in total

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