| Literature DB >> 23335874 |
Adrian K C Lee1, Siddharth Rajaram, Jing Xia, Hari Bharadwaj, Eric Larson, Matti S Hämäläinen, Barbara G Shinn-Cunningham.
Abstract
In order to extract information in a rich environment, we focus on different features that allow us to direct attention to whatever source is of interest. The cortical network deployed during spatial attention, especially in vision, is well characterized. For example, visuospatial attention engages a frontoparietal network including the frontal eye fields (FEFs), which modulate activity in visual sensory areas to enhance the representation of an attended visual object. However, relatively little is known about the neural circuitry controlling attention directed to non-spatial features, or to auditory objects or features (either spatial or non-spatial). Here, using combined magnetoencephalography (MEG) and anatomical information obtained from MRI, we contrasted cortical activity when observers attended to different auditory features given the same acoustic mixture of two simultaneous spoken digits. Leveraging the fine temporal resolution of MEG, we establish that activity in left FEF is enhanced both prior to and throughout the auditory stimulus when listeners direct auditory attention to target location compared to when they focus on target pitch. In contrast, activity in the left posterior superior temporal sulcus (STS), a region previously associated with auditory pitch categorization, is greater when listeners direct attention to target pitch rather than target location. This differential enhancement is only significant after observers are instructed which cue to attend, but before the acoustic stimuli begin. We therefore argue that left FEF participates more strongly in directing auditory spatial attention, while the left STS aids auditory object selection based on the non-spatial acoustic feature of pitch.Entities:
Keywords: auditory attention; auditory spatial processing; frontal eye fields; magnetoencephalography; pitch processing; superior temporal sulcus
Year: 2013 PMID: 23335874 PMCID: PMC3538445 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2012.00190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1We used an auditory attention paradigm that visually cued subjects to attend to either the location (left/right) or the pitch (up/down) of an upcoming sound. Throughout each trial, subjects were asked to maintain fixation on a center dot (0.3° visual angle). A 300-ms-long arrow cue (1.0° visual angle) instructed subject what to attend in the upcoming sound (see right inset). The sound mixture, presented 700 ms after the arrow cue was extinguished, consisted of two spoken digit tokens (see left inset). The pitch of the speech was manipulated using Praat (Boersma and Weenink, 2012); spatial location was controlled by processing with head-related transfer functions. Listeners reported the target digit (values 1–4) by a button press after the appearance of a center ring.
Figure 2Left FEF and left STG are more active prior to sound onset when subjects attend to space and pitch, respectively, based on contrasts of the cortical signal in the two conditions. (A) Statistical map (group average) displayed on the inflated cortical surface of the left and right hemispheres, illustrating a vertex-by-vertex comparison (yellow: greater activity in location trials; blue: greater activity in pitch trials; minimum cluster-size threshold 100 vertices). Functionally localized FEF regions are highlighted in green. B/C: normalized evoked cortical current time courses for the significant left FEF (B) and left STG regions (C) for both location and pitch conditions, shown with standard error bars (μ ± SEM) across subjects.