Literature DB >> 22429245

Pitting binding against selection--electrophysiological measures of feature-based attention are attenuated by Gestalt object grouping.

Adam C Snyder1, Ian C Fiebelkorn, John J Foxe.   

Abstract

Humans have limited cognitive resources to process the nearly limitless information available in the environment. Endogenous, or 'top-down', selective attention to basic visual features such as color or motion is a common strategy for biasing resources in favor of the most relevant information sources in a given context. Opposing this top-down separation of features is a 'bottom-up' tendency to integrate, or bind, the various features that constitute objects. We pitted these two processes against each other in an electrophysiological experiment to test if top-down selective attention can overcome constitutive binding processes. Our results demonstrate that bottom-up binding processes can dominate top-down feature-based attention even when explicitly detrimental to task performance.
© 2012 The Authors. European Journal of Neuroscience © 2012 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22429245      PMCID: PMC3413197          DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2012.08016.x

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


  37 in total

1.  The spread of attention across modalities and space in a multisensory object.

Authors:  Laura Busse; Kenneth C Roberts; Roy E Crist; Daniel H Weissman; Marty G Woldorff
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2005-12-09       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Object-based attention is multisensory: co-activation of an object's representations in ignored sensory modalities.

Authors:  Sophie Molholm; Antigona Martinez; Marina Shpaner; John J Foxe
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2007-07       Impact factor: 3.386

3.  The role of spatial attention in the selection of real and illusory objects.

Authors:  Antígona Martinez; Dhakshin S Ramanathan; John J Foxe; Daniel C Javitt; Steven A Hillyard
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2007-07-25       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Dual mechanisms for the cross-sensory spread of attention: how much do learned associations matter?

Authors:  Ian C Fiebelkorn; John J Foxe; Sophie Molholm
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 5.357

5.  Neural integration of top-down spatial and feature-based information in visual search.

Authors:  Tobias Egner; Jim M P Monti; Emily H Trittschuh; Christina A Wieneke; Joy Hirsch; M-Marsel Mesulam
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2008-06-11       Impact factor: 6.167

6.  Tactile shape discrimination recruits human lateral occipital complex during early perceptual processing.

Authors:  Joshua N Lucan; John J Foxe; Manuel Gomez-Ramirez; K Sathian; Sophie Molholm
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2010-11       Impact factor: 5.038

7.  A human intracranial study of long-range oscillatory coherence across a frontal-occipital-hippocampal brain network during visual object processing.

Authors:  Pejman Sehatpour; Sophie Molholm; Theodore H Schwartz; Jeannette R Mahoney; Ashesh D Mehta; Daniel C Javitt; Patric K Stanton; John J Foxe
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-03-11       Impact factor: 11.205

8.  Early processing in the human lateral occipital complex is highly responsive to illusory contours but not to salient regions.

Authors:  Marina Shpaner; Micah M Murray; John J Foxe
Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2009-11-06       Impact factor: 3.386

9.  Attention to features precedes attention to locations in visual search: evidence from electromagnetic brain responses in humans.

Authors:  Jens-Max Hopf; Kai Boelmans; Mircea Ariel Schoenfeld; Steven J Luck; Hans-Jochen Heinze
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2004-02-25       Impact factor: 6.167

10.  Attention to the Color of a Moving Stimulus Modulates Motion-Signal Processing in Macaque Area MT: Evidence for a Unified Attentional System.

Authors:  Steffen Katzner; Laura Busse; Stefan Treue
Journal:  Front Syst Neurosci       Date:  2009-10-30
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  2 in total

1.  Object-based selection modulates top-down attentional shifts.

Authors:  Satoshi Nishida; Tomohiro Shibata; Kazushi Ikeda
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2014-02-21       Impact factor: 3.169

2.  Non-binding relationship between visual features.

Authors:  Dragan Rangelov; Semir Zeki
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2014-10-08       Impact factor: 3.169

  2 in total

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