| Literature DB >> 25171805 |
Brian A Anderson1, Patryk A Laurent2, Steven Yantis2.
Abstract
Goal-directed and stimulus-driven factors determine attentional priority through a well defined dorsal frontal-parietal and ventral temporal-parietal network of brain regions, respectively. Recent evidence demonstrates that reward-related stimuli also have high attentional priority, independent of their physical salience and goal-relevance. The neural mechanisms underlying such value-driven attentional control are unknown. Using human functional magnetic resonance imaging, we demonstrate that the tail of the caudate nucleus and extrastriate visual cortex respond preferentially to task-irrelevant but previously reward-associated objects, providing an attentional priority signal that is sensitive to reward history. The caudate tail has not been implicated in the control of goal-directed or stimulus-driven attention, but is well suited to mediate the value-driven control of attention. Our findings reveal the neural basis of value-based attentional priority.Entities:
Keywords: Attentional capture; Basal ganglia; Reward learning; Selective attention; fMRI
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25171805 PMCID: PMC4253668 DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2014.08.062
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Res ISSN: 0006-8993 Impact factor: 3.252