| Literature DB >> 25717165 |
Carolyn J Perry1, Lauren E Sergio2, J Douglas Crawford3, Mazyar Fallah4.
Abstract
Often, the brain receives more sensory input than it can process simultaneously. Spatial attention helps overcome this limitation by preferentially processing input from a behaviorally-relevant location. Recent neuropsychological and psychophysical studies suggest that attention is deployed to near-hand space much like how the oculomotor system can deploy attention to an upcoming gaze position. Here we provide the first neuronal evidence that the presence of a nearby hand enhances orientation selectivity in early visual processing area V2. When the hand was placed outside the receptive field, responses to the preferred orientation were significantly enhanced without a corresponding significant increase at the orthogonal orientation. Consequently, there was also a significant sharpening of orientation tuning. In addition, the presence of the hand reduced neuronal response variability. These results indicate that attention is automatically deployed to the space around a hand, improving orientation selectivity. Importantly, this appears to be optimal for motor control of the hand, as opposed to oculomotor mechanisms which enhance responses without sharpening orientation selectivity. Effector-based mechanisms for visual enhancement thus support not only the spatiotemporal dissociation of gaze and reach, but also the optimization of vision for their separate requirements for guiding movements.Keywords: attention; peripersonal space; reaching; vision
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25717165 PMCID: PMC4416623 DOI: 10.1152/jn.00919.2013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurophysiol ISSN: 0022-3077 Impact factor: 2.714