| Literature DB >> 28031455 |
Mareike Bayer1, Valentina Rossi2, Naomi Vanlessen2,3, Annika Grass1, Annekathrin Schacht1, Gilles Pourtois2.
Abstract
Motivation and attention constitute major determinants of human perception and action. Nonetheless, it remains a matter of debate whether motivation effects on the visual cortex depend on the spatial attention system, or rely on independent pathways. This study investigated the impact of motivation and spatial attention on the activity of the human primary and extrastriate visual cortex by employing a factorial manipulation of the two factors in a cued pattern discrimination task. During stimulus presentation, we recorded event-related potentials and pupillary responses. Motivational relevance increased the amplitudes of the C1 component at ∼70 ms after stimulus onset. This modulation occurred independently of spatial attention effects, which were evident at the P1 level. Furthermore, motivation and spatial attention had independent effects on preparatory activation as measured by the contingent negative variation; and pupil data showed increased activation in response to incentive targets. Taken together, these findings suggest independent pathways for the influence of motivation and spatial attention on the activity of the human visual cortex.Entities:
Keywords: C1; ERP; motivation; reward; spatial attention
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28031455 PMCID: PMC5390750 DOI: 10.1093/scan/nsw162
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Soc Cogn Affect Neurosci ISSN: 1749-5016 Impact factor: 3.436
Fig. 1.Stimuli and trial structure. Cues provided information about the motivational relevance and the spatial location (UVF/LVF) of the upcoming target stimulus. Target stimuli contained six target symbols, three on each side, which had the same or a different orientation. After giving their response, participants were informed about the accuracy of their response by a feedback stimulus, which also indicated the amount of money they had won or lost on incentive trials.
Fig. 2.ERP grand mean waveforms and topographies. (A) C1 waveforms (left) and scalp topographies (right) for incentive and neutral trials presented in the UVF/LVF. The position of the electrodes is indicated by the red dots on the electrode layout. Scalp distributions refer to specified time intervals. (B) P1 waveforms (left) and scalp distributions (right) of the P1 in response to stimuli presented in the UVF (electrode A21) and in the LVF (electrode B7). Electrodes comprising the respective regions of interest are marked in red, depicted electrodes are indicated in black. (C) Grand mean waveforms in response to cue stimuli (left), depicting enhanced amplitudes of the CNV for incentive vs neutral and cued vs uncued trials. On the right, distributions of difference waves between incentive minus neutral and cued minus uncued conditions.
Fig. 3.Behavioral results. RTs and accuracy (means and SEs) for UVF, LVF and all eccentricities of target symbol presentation. Results show increasing RTs and decreasing accuracy with increasing distance of the target symbol from central fixation.
Means and standard errors of RTs and accuracy in the pattern recognition task, separately for UVF/LVF presentations
| Incentive | Neutral | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cued | Uncued | Cued | Uncued | |||||
| UVF | LVF | UVF | LVF | UVF | LVF | UVF | LVF | |
| RT [ms] | 818.8 (30.2) | 828.1 (30.4) | 830.4 (23.7) | 852.9 (27.9) | 810.9 (30.9) | 811.8 (30.9) | 837.8 (23.8) | 842.6 (25.5) |
| Accuracy [%] | 68.6 (2.3) | 70.3 (2.6) | 68.5 (2.4) | 69.0 (2.7) | 70.0 (2.7) | 67.4 (2.4) | 66.8 (2.1) | 67.9 (2.0) |
Fig. 4.Cue-related and target-related pupillary responses. Left side: Results show larger pupil diameter for incentive trials compared with neutral trials during target processing, irrespective of cue-related responses. Right side: Cueing does not influence target-related pupillary responses above cue-related differences. Note that the general decrease in pupil size during target processing is due to the increased luminance of the stimulus arrays.
Fig. 5.Time course of pupillary responses. Mean pupil diameter for incentive vs neutral trials (left side) and cued vs uncued trials (right side), including point-wise within-subject 95% CIs.