| Literature DB >> 24904374 |
Jocelyn L Sy1, Scott A Guerin2, Anna Stegman3, Barry Giesbrecht4.
Abstract
The load theory of visual attention proposes that efficient selective perceptual processing of task-relevant information during search is determined automatically by the perceptual demands of the display. If the perceptual demands required to process task-relevant information are not enough to consume all available capacity, then the remaining capacity automatically and exhaustively "spills-over" to task-irrelevant information. The spill-over of perceptual processing capacity increases the likelihood that task-irrelevant information will impair performance. In two visual search experiments, we tested the automaticity of the allocation of perceptual processing resources by measuring the extent to which the processing of task-irrelevant distracting stimuli was modulated by both perceptual load and top-down expectations using behavior, functional magnetic resonance imaging, and electrophysiology. Expectations were generated using a trial-by-trial cue that provided information about the likely load of the upcoming visual search task. When the cues were valid, behavioral interference was eliminated and the influence of load on frontoparietal and visual cortical responses was attenuated relative to when the cues were invalid. In conditions in which task-irrelevant information interfered with performance and modulated visual activity, individual differences in mean blood oxygenation level dependent responses measured from the left intraparietal sulcus were negatively correlated with individual differences in the severity of distraction. These results are consistent with the interpretation that a top-down biasing mechanism interacts with perceptual load to support filtering of task-irrelevant information.Entities:
Keywords: distraction; dorsal attention network; selective attention; visual cortex
Year: 2014 PMID: 24904374 PMCID: PMC4034704 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Regions of significant activation in the whole-brain contrast for the spatial localizer task.
| Region | Voxels | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Left middle occipital gyrus | -30 | -96 | -3 | 82 |
| Right middle occipital gyrus | 36 | -78 | -0 | 82 |
| Left precuneus | 0 | -51 | 57 | 23 |
| Left superior frontal gyrus | -12 | 12 | 57 | 10 |
| Right anterior cingulate | 15 | 18 | 24 | 14 |
| Left lingual gyrus | -12 | -87 | -9 | 25 |
| Right lingual gyrus | 12 | -87 | -6 | 12 |
Whole-brain contrast for cue-only minus null-event activation.
| Region | Voxels | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Left middle occipital gyrus | -30 | -90 | -3 | 194 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus/precentral sulcus | 45 | 3 | 39 | 162 |
| Right occipital/fusiform | 36 | -66 | -15 | 112 |
| Left middle frontal gyrus/precentral sulcus | -45 | 0 | 51 | 159 |
| Left superior frontal gyrus | 0 | 9 | 57 | 128 |
| Right insula | 36 | 21 | 12 | 37 |
| Left posterior cingulate | 0 | -30 | 21 | 38 |
| Right superior temporal gyrus | 48 | -36 | 15 | 70 |
| Left intraparietal sulcus/superior parietal lobe | -18 | -60 | 39 | 120 |
| Left superior temporal gyrus | -51 | -42 | 21 | 23 |
| Right intraparietal sulcus/precuneus | 30 | -54 | 48 | 37 |
Pearson correlations between peak frontoparietal activations and behavioral interference scores under low load conditions.
| Region | Valid cue | Invalid cue |
|---|---|---|
| Left precentral gyrus/middle frontal gyrus | 0.25 | -0.32 |
| Right middle frontal gyrus | 0.39 | -0.20 |
| Left precuneus/superior parietal lobe | -0.14 | -0.81** |
| Right intraparietal lobule/precuneus | 0.11 | -0.55* |