Control of Attention Shifts between Vision and Audition in Human Cortex

Selective attention contributes to perceptual efficiency by modulating cortical activity according to task demands. Visual attention is controlled by activity in posterior parietal and superior frontal cortices, but little is known about the neural basis of attentional control within and between oth...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of neuroscience 2004-11, Vol.24 (47), p.10702-10706
Hauptverfasser: Shomstein, Sarah, Yantis, Steven
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container_issue 47
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container_title The Journal of neuroscience
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creator Shomstein, Sarah
Yantis, Steven
description Selective attention contributes to perceptual efficiency by modulating cortical activity according to task demands. Visual attention is controlled by activity in posterior parietal and superior frontal cortices, but little is known about the neural basis of attentional control within and between other sensory modalities. We examined human brain activity during attention shifts between vision and audition. Attention shifts from vision to audition caused increased activity in auditory cortex and decreased activity in visual cortex and vice versa, reflecting the effects of attention on sensory representations. Posterior parietal and superior prefrontal cortices exhibited transient increases in activity that were time locked to the initiation of voluntary attention shifts between vision and audition. These findings reveal that the attentional control functions of posterior parietal and superior prefrontal cortices are not limited to the visual domain but also include the control of crossmodal shifts of attention.
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subjects Adult
Attention - physiology
Auditory Perception - physiology
Brief Communications
Cerebral Cortex - anatomy & histology
Cerebral Cortex - physiology
Eye Movements - physiology
Female
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Parietal Lobe - physiology
Prefrontal Cortex - physiology
Visual Perception - physiology
title Control of Attention Shifts between Vision and Audition in Human Cortex
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