 |
Previous Article | Next Article 
The Journal of Neuroscience, July 15, 2001, 21(14):5262-5271
Attention Systems and the Organization of the Human
Parietal Cortex
M. F. S.
Rushworth1, 2,
T.
Paus3, and
P. K.
Sipila3
1 Department of Experimental Psychology, Oxford
University, Oxford, OX1 3UD, United Kingdom,
2 Oxford Centre for Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
of the Brain, Department of Clinical Neurology, Oxford University, John
Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford, OX3 9DU, United Kingdom, and
3 Montreal Neurological Institute, Montreal, Quebec,
H3A 2B4 Canada
 |
ABSTRACT |
Event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging was used
to compare activity in the human parietal cortex in two
attention-switching paradigms. On each trial of the visual switching
(VS) paradigm, subjects attended to one of two visual stimuli on the
basis of either their color or shape. Trials were presented in blocks
interleaved with cues instructing subjects to either continue attending
to the currently relevant dimension or to switch to the other stimulus dimension. In the response switching (RS) paradigm, subjects made one
of two manual responses to the single stimulus presented on each trial.
The rules for stimulus-response mapping were reversed on
different trials. Trials were presented in blocks interleaved with cues
that instructed subjects to either switch stimulus-response mapping
rules or to continue with the current rule. Brain activity at
"switch" and "stay" events was compared. The results revealed distinct parietal areas concerned with visual attentional set shifts
(VS) and visuomotor intentional set shifts (RS). In VS, activity was
recorded in the lateral part of the intraparietal region. In RS,
activity was recorded in the posterior medial intraparietal region and
adjacent posterior superior and dorsomedial parietal cortex. The
results also suggest that the basic functional organization of the
intraparietal sulcus and surrounding regions is similar in both macaque
and human species.
Key words:
LIP; MIP; PE; conditional motor selection; intraparietal
sulcus; set-switching
 |
INTRODUCTION |
There is no definite consensus on
the correspondence between monkey and human parietal cortex. Brodmann
(1909) argued that, in the monkey, the superior parietal lobule (SPL)
and inferior parietal lobule (IPL) consist principally of areas 5 and
7, respectively. In the human, however, he suggested that both areas 5 and 7 are in the SPL, whereas new areas 39 and 40 are found in the IPL. Other anatomists, however, have identified a correspondence between the
cytoarchitecture of the human and macaque IPL and the human and macaque
SPL (Von Bonin and Bailey, 1947 ; Eidelburg and Galaburda, 1984 ).
According to this view, the IPL and SPL are organized similarly in both
species, and the intraparietal sulcus divides the parietal cortex
similarly in both species.
Functional imaging has not resolved this debate. Such studies suggest
that visuospatial attention is correlated with posterior parietal
activity in human subjects, but different studies locate the critical
region in the SPL or IPL, and some even suggest that an extensive
region including both lobules is associated with visuospatial attention
(Corbetta et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Nobre et al., 1997 ; Coull and Nobre,
1998 ; Corbetta and Shulman, 1999 ; Gitelman et al., 1999 ). It is
therefore not clear if the human parietal cortex has a similar or
dissimilar functional organization to that of the macaque, in which
visuospatial attention and oculomotor control depend on the
posterior IPL and adjacent lateral intraparietal sulcus (Andersen et
al., 1998 ; Colby and Goldberg, 1999 ).
In studies of visual attention, subjects are usually required to
respond with hand movements, although visual attention is more
naturally linked with eye movements than hand movements. The
neuroimaging studies may have inadvertently activated not just a system
for visual attention but also an attentional system related to hand
movements; there is evidence that the lateral and medial banks of the
intraparietal sulcus of the macaque are concerned with visual
attention-eye movements and with hand movements, respectively (Colby
and Duhamel, 1991 ; Snyder et al., 1997 , 1998 ; Eskander and Assad,
1999 ). Previous human neuroimaging studies may have activated the human
homologs of both areas.
In the present experiments we compared two task-switching paradigms. In
both paradigms, event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging
(fMRI) was used to measure brain activity at the time of a task switch.
In the visual switch (VS) paradigm, subjects switched between attending
to one of two stimuli on the basis of either color or shape. Attending
to the shape or color of a stimulus means that subjects also attend to
its spatial location (Tsal and Lavie, 1988 , 1993 ). Manual responses
were only rarely required at the time of attentional switching. The
response switch (RS) paradigm required a switch of visuomotor-related
intention; subjects switched between selecting one of two responses,
cued by visual stimuli, according to one of two rules. Switch-related activity was recorded in the lateral intraparietal region in VS but in
the medial intraparietal region and adjacent posterior SPL in RS. The
results suggest that similar functional regions are located in the
medial and lateral intraparietal sulcus in both humans and monkeys.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Subjects
A total of 20 right-handed, healthy volunteers participated in
the fMRI recording study (ages 19-31 years). The vision of all
subjects was normal or corrected to normal with MRI-compatible glasses.
Ten subjects performed the RS paradigm, and 10 performed the VS
paradigm. The data from two subjects who performed the VS task was lost
after main power failures disrupted data acquisition and storage. All
subjects gave their informed consent before participation. The
procedures were approved by the Research Ethics Committee of the
Montreal Neurological Institute and Hospital. Different subjects
participated in each experiment because sufficient data could only be
gathered for one paradigm in a given scanning session. Moreover, in
this way, the potential for task confusion was avoided; because of
matching, the cues used in the two tasks were identical in appearance
but dissimilar in terms of their behavioral role.
Behavioral tasks
Both paradigms were conducted with subjects lying in the dimly
illuminated MRI scanner. Stimuli were projected onto a screen using a
liquid crystal display projector at the head of the scanner tube. Subjects wore prism goggles so that the stimuli appeared directly
in front of them. We have previously shown that attentional or
intentional task switching is associated with a similar behavioral cost, measured in terms of reaction time, in both VS and RS paradigms (M. F. S. Rushworth, A. C. Nobre, and R. E. Passingham, unpublished observations).
Response switching. Figure
1 (left-hand column)
summarizes the RS task. The RS task targeted the mechanisms of
attention or task-switching related to the execution of manual
responses. On each trial, subjects saw either a red triangle (5.1°
width, 2.7° height) or square (3.7° width, 2.7° height). During
the first set of trials, subjects made a right-hand response to the
square and a left-hand response to the triangle. A small circle (0.9° diameter, 70 msec duration) provided feedback to the subjects 100 msec
after the response (yellow for correct responses and blue for incorrect
responses). An interval of 800 msec followed before the onset of the
next trial. The intervals between trial onsets varied according with
reaction time and averaged ~1500 msec.

View larger version (18K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 1.
Details of the RS task are shown in the
left-hand column. Subjects were presented with a series
of task items. The items were always either squares or
triangles. Subjects alternated between two response
selection rules either triangle-left-hand and square-right-hand or
triangle-right-hand and square-left-hand. The figure shows an example
in which the subject started with the first rule and later switches to
the second rule. Every 9-11 trials, a white cue shape instructed
subjects to either stay with the current selection rule set or to
switch to using the other rule set. Stay or switch cues were
differentiated by a + or x at their center. The meaning of the + and x
was counterbalanced across subjects. In the example shown, the + and
the x mean stay and switch, respectively. The right-hand
column shows examples of stimuli used in the VS task. The task
was formally similar to the RS task. On each trial subjects were
presented with a pair of stimuli (items) either side of a central
fixation point. One of the stimuli was always red, and
the other was green. One of the stimuli was always a
square, and the other was a triangle. The
subject attended to just one of the two stimuli according to a rule
based on either color or shape. The design was fully counterbalanced so
that some subjects alternated between attending to red or square
stimuli, while others alternated between red or triangle, green or
square, or green or triangle. For example, the subject might start
(top panel) by attending to just the red stimulus
item on every trial, regardless of its shape. Every 9-11 trials, a
white cue shape instructed subjects to either stay with the current
selection rule or to switch to using a selection rule based on the
other stimulus dimension. For example, the subject might then attend to
the square stimulus regardless of color (seventh panel
from top). Again, stay or switch cues were
differentiated by a + or x at their center. The meaning assignments of
the + and x were counterbalanced across subjects as before. In the
example shown, the + and the x mean stay and switch, respectively. The
subject's task was to detect a rare target, V
(fourth panel from top), and
respond with a key press. The V only ever appeared in
the attended stimulus and only on 20% of trials. On other trials only
non-target were presented, and no response was
required. Both the target and non-target V and the
were only present for the final 15 msec of the total
70 msec of stimulus presentation.
|
|
Each experimental session was broken down into blocks of 9-11 trials.
The rules by which responses were selected varied between blocks; on
some blocks subjects responded to squares and triangles by pressing
buttons with the left and right hands, respectively. Each block was
preceded by an instruction cue. Instruction cues were either a vertical
(+) or a tilted (x) cross appearing in a white rectangular background
(6° width, 5° height) presented for 200 msec. Cues indicated that
the subject should either switch rules for response selection or stay
with the current response selection rules. There was a 1000 msec
interval between the onset of the instructive cue and the onset of the
first pair of items. The meaning assignment (switch, stay) of each cue
(x, +) was counterbalanced across subjects.
Trials were presented in four sessions each of 5 min duration. The
event-related analysis was centered on a comparison of BOLD signal
after the switch and stay cues. The timing of both types of cue onset
was recorded with respect to the onset of acquisition of each frame of
fMRI data (see below). A control "`rest" cue was presented every 3 sec for the final 25 sec of each session. The rest cue resembled
the other instruction cues but consisted of a black circle on a white
background. No trials followed the rest cues, and subjects were
required to take no action in response to them. No analysis of the rest
cues is reported.
Visual switching. Figure 1 (right-hand column)
summarizes the VS task. The VS paradigm complemented the RS paradigm
and shared most aspects of its formal design. It was designed to study
the mechanisms of visual attentional task switching. Subjects were required to switch attention between different sensory dimensions of
stimuli. Two visual stimulus items were presented simultaneously (70 msec duration) to either side (1.7° eccentricity) of a white central
fixation cross (1.3° width, 1.1° height) on a black background. The
two items always consisted of one square shape (1.7° width × 2° height) and one triangular shape [2.6° width (narrower at base), 2° height]. One of the items was always green, and one of the
items was always red. Either shape could be combined with either color.
Subjects used either a particular shape (e.g., square) or color (e.g.,
red) to direct their attention to the relevant item to detect embedded
targets (see below). There was a variable 1200-1500 msec interval
between trials.
As in the RS paradigm, each experimental session was broken down into
shorter blocks of 9-11 trials. At the beginning of an experimental
block, during the first set of trials, subjects were told to attend to
one particular stimulus feature (e.g., red color) and identify targets
that appeared within the relevant (red) item. Subsequently, instruction
cues appeared before each set of 9-11 trials. Instruction cues were
either a vertical (+) or a tilted (x) cross appearing in a white
rectangular background (6° width, 5° height) presented for 200 msec. Cues indicated that the subject should switch the current visual
rule for selection or stay with the current visual rule. There was a
1000 msec interval between the onset of the instructive cue and the
onset of the first pair of items.
The visual selection rule was switched between particular predefined
features in the two different dimensions of color and shape. Each
subject was instructed to attend to a particular color or a particular
shape. For example, a given subject might be instructed to switch
between attending to the square shape and the red color while another
subject might be asked to switch between attending to the triangle
shape and the green color. In this way the task could be made simple
for each individual subject, but the relevant version of each dimension
could counterbalanced across the group of subjects. So some subjects
alternated between red color-square shape, others between green
color-triangle shape, others between green color-square shape, and
still others between red color-triangle shape.
The sequence of events that would be encountered by a subject switching
attention between the red color and the square shape can be summarized.
Starting with the relevant feature "red" the switch cue (e.g., x)
would inform the subject that the relevant feature became "square."
The next switch cue instructed the subject that the relevant feature
returned to being "red." The appearance of the stay cue (+)
instructed subjects to continue selecting items based on their current
visual rule. The meaning assignment (switch, stay) of each cue (x, +)
was also counterbalanced across subjects.
The counterbalancing of cue assignment and selection features ensured
that behavioral measures were not confounded with artifacts because of
different physical appearances of the stimuli. Five levels of matched
red and green luminosities were used randomly for item colors
throughout the experiment. Differences in the physical intensity of
stimuli therefore were unlikely to contribute systematically to
attentional effects.
To ensure feature-guided sensory attention, subjects were asked to
discriminate small target stimuli embedded within the items. A small
(0.7° long and 0.06° high) horizontal or angled line was presented
in the middle of each item. The embedded stimulus appeared only briefly
(15 msec) at the end of each item presentation (55 msec after item
onset) to maximize the advantage of orienting toward the relevant item.
On most trials (80%), embedded non-targets were presented; the
non-target was either a horizontal line or a line angled upward
(approximating a "v") to different degrees (0.06° to 2.9°). On
rare (20%) target trials, the line was deviated downward (into a
"w", always by 2.9°). Subjects responded upon the detection of
the rare target (w) with a single key-press. Targets (w) only ever
appeared in the relevant visual dimension to which subjects were attending.
As for RS, VS trials were presented in four sessions, each of 5 min
duration. The event-related analysis was centered on a comparison of
BOLD signal after the switch and stay cues. A control rest cue was
presented every 3 sec for the final 25 sec of each session. The rest
cue resembled the other instruction cues but consisted of a black
circle on a white background. No trials followed the rest cues, and
subjects were required to take no action in response to them. No
analysis of the rest cue period is reported.
MRI acquisition
Scanning was performed on a 1.5 T Siemens Vision magnet. The
scanning procedure began with the acquisition of a high-resolution T1
structural anatomical scan [80 slices at a thickness of 2 mm; 256 × 256 matrix size; repetition time (TR), 22 msec; echo time (TE), 10 msec; flip angle, 30°; voxel size, 1 × 1 × 2 mm3]. This was immediately
followed by acquisition of four series of 120 gradient-echo images (20 slices of 5 mm thickness in the same orientation as the Sylvian fissure
starting above the most dorsal cortex; 64 × 64 matrix size; TR,
2.441 msec; TE, 50 msec; flip angle, 90°; voxel size, 5 × 5 × 5 mm3) of BOLD signal while
subjects performed the behavioral tasks.
Event-related fMRI data analysis
Each subject's T1 structural image was transformed into
standard stereotaxic space (Talairach and Tournoux, 1988 ) based on 305 brains (Evans et al., 1992 ) using in-house software (Collins et al.,
1994 ). BOLD signal images were smoothed with a three-dimensional (3-D)
6 mm (full width half maximum) Gaussian kernel, corrected for head
motion artifact and transformed into the same standard stereotaxic
space. The statistical analysis was performed with adapted in-house
software (Worsley et al., 2000 ) using a method based on a linear
model with correlated errors and a random effects analysis.
Task-related brain activity was measured by examining the BOLD signal
after the switch and stay cues in the VS and RS paradigms (Fig. 2); the
BOLD signal was convolved with a hemodynamic response function that was
modeled as a -density function with a mean lag of 7 sec and a
SD of 3 sec (Zarahn et al., 1997 ) timed to coincide with the
onset of switch or stay cues. It has been shown that set shifting is
not completed on presentation of an instruction cue (Rogers and
Monsell, 1995 ; Allport and Wylie, 1999; Rushworth et al., 1999 ).
The set shift is only completed after initiation of the next block. The
convolved BOLD signal reflects neural processes operating at both the
beginning of the set shift (on cue presentation) and at the end of the
set shift (on presentation of the first task item). Drift was removed
by adding third-order polynomial covariates in the volume acquisition times in the design matrix (which were not convolved with the hemodynamic response function). Random-effects T-statistical maps of
significant difference between cue-related BOLD signals were constructed by using a spatially smoothed (15 mm full width half maximum Gaussian kernel) estimate of the random effects variance. The
t statistical maps were then thresholded (t > 4.75; p < 0.01; t > 5.19;
p < 0.001) in accordance with the Bonferonni
correction for multiple comparisons, for the entire 20 slice brain
volume-scanned, and non-isotropic random field theory (Worsley
et al., 1996 , 1999 ). Although the analysis was performed without
previous definition of a region of interest limited to the parietal
cortex we report, in detail, just the results for the parietal cortex.
 |
RESULTS |
Behavioral results
Switching in both VS and RS paradigms was associated with a
behavioral cost that could be measured in reaction time (RT). Nine of
the 10 RS subjects responded more slowly on the first trial of a switch
block than they had on the first trial of a stay block (Figs.
2,
3a). The mean RTs for the
first responses in stay and switch RS blocks were 505 and 605 msec,
respectively (Wilcoxon, t = 0; N = 10;
p = 0.008). All eight VS subjects responded more slowly on the
first trial of a switch block than they had on the first trial of a
stay block (Fig. 3b). The mean RTs for the first responses
in the stay and switch VS blocks were 579 and 665 msec, respectively,
which differed significantly (Wilcoxon, t = 0;
N = 8; p = 0.012).

View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 2.
The RS and VS tasks were formally similar. Both
tasks were composed of blocks of 9-11 items separated by the
presentation of cues. The cues were either switch or stay cues that
instructed subjects to switch the selection rule or to continue with
the current selection rule, respectively. The BOLD signals, modeled as
-density functions with a mean lag of 7 sec and an SD of 3 sec
(gray regions) after switch and stay cues were
compared.
|
|

View larger version (15K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 3.
Behavioral results from the VS
(left) and RS (right) tasks. The
black line shows RTs recorded from switch block trials.
The dotted line shows RTs recorded from stay block
trials. In both tasks, switching selection rule was associated with an
RT cost that was most apparent on the first trial of the block and that
subsequently diminished.
|
|
fMRI results
Switching in both VS and RS paradigms was associated with
increases in BOLD signal ("activations") in a number of parietal regions in and around the intraparietal sulcus (Figs.
4-9).
VS activations in the parietal cortex were recorded in the lateral bank
of the intraparietal sulcus and in the parieto-occipital region.
Posterior parietal RS activations were recorded in the medial bank of
the intraparietal sulcus and in the adjacent posterior superior and
mediodorsal parietal lobule. There were no significant switching-related BOLD signal decreases in the parietal cortex.

View larger version (54K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 4.
Axial sections through the parietal lobe
showing group t-statistical maps of significant BOLD
signal increase in VS (green) and RS
(red) tasks (threshold, t > 4.75;
p < 0.01) in the lateral bank of the intraparietal
sulcus. The VS and RS results are shown separately on the
left and together on the right.
Activations are shown superimposed on average brain anatomical MRIs of
participating subjects in Talairach and Tournoux (1988) space. The
results for both tasks are shown together in the
right-hand column, superimposed on the average MRI for
all participating subjects. VS (green) activity
is most prominent in the posterior lateral intraparietal sulcus in the
more ventral section (z = 43). More anteriorly, in
the same section, within the lateral intraparietal sulcus, however, RS
(red) activity predominates. The more dorsal section
(z = 53) shows RS-related activity confined to the
medial intraparietal region and the posterior superior parietal
lobule.
|
|

View larger version (79K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 5.
Coronal sections through the parietal
lobe showing group t-statistical maps of significant
BOLD signal increase in the VS (green) and RS
(red) tasks. Activations are shown superimposed on
average brain anatomical MRIs of participating subjects in Talairach
and Tournoux (1988) space. The most posterior section is shown at the
bottom, and the most anterior is at the
top. The number beside each section gives
the position, in millimeters, of the anteroposterior
(y-axis) position of the coronal section, with
respect to the anterior commissure. Yellow arrows
indicate the intraparietal sulcus.
|
|

View larger version (48K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 6.
Sagittal sections through the parietal
lobe showing areas of group t-statistical maps of
significant BOLD signal increase in the VS
(green) and RS (red) tasks.
Activations are shown superimposed on the average brain anatomical MRIs
of participating subjects.
|
|

View larger version (35K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 7.
The position of the VS
(green) and RS (red) activations
either side of the intraparietal sulcus can be best appreciated in a
section orthogonal to the main axis of the intraparietal sulcus.
A shows a coronal section taken through the parietal
lobe. The position of the intraparietal sulcus is indicated with an
arrow. The yellow line shows the angle of
a plane of section approximately orthogonal to the intraparietal
sulcus. B shows the section orthogonal to the
intraparietal sulcus on the group average MRI. Within the posterior
intraparietal sulcus RS activations, in the medial bank of the
intraparietal sulcus and the posterior SPL, are more caudal, dorsal,
and medial. VS activations in the posterior intraparietal sulcus are
more rostral, ventral, and lateral, in the lateral bank of the
intraparietal sulcus. C shows the same activations on
the anatomical MRI scan of a single representative subject.
|
|

View larger version (119K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 8.
The more ventral, lateral, and rostral position of
VS (green) activations in the posterior parietal
cortex, compared with RS (red) activations, can be seen
in a 3-D view of semi-transparent brain anatomy.
|
|

View larger version (26K):
[in this window]
[in a new window]
|
Figure 9.
The positions of posterior parietal activations
recorded in VS ( ) and RS ( ) tasks have been plotted on a 3-D
graph. Although this mode of presentation tends to underemphasize
rostrocaudal differences, the distinct localization of VS and RS
activations is clear. All activations have been plotted as if they fell
into the left hemisphere. The VS-RS separation is not, therefore, a
spurious consequence of activations being lateralized to different
hemispheres.
|
|
More anterior parietal regions, in the supramarginal gyrus and adjacent
anterior intraparietal sulcus, were activated mainly in the RS task
(Fig. 4). Only one VS task peak, but five RS peaks, were recorded in
this region. Figure 4 shows an axial section that approximately follows
the intraparietal sulcus. It can be seen that there is a transition
from VS- to RS-related activity moving anteriorly along the lateral
bank of the intraparietal sulcus.
Both VS and RS tasks activated the more posterior parietal regions,
posterior to the supramarginal gyrus. The two tasks, however, activated
different regions within the more posterior parietal cortex; RS
activations appeared to be on the medial bank of the intraparietal
sulcus and the adjacent posterior SPL, whereas VS activations appeared
to be on the lateral bank of the intraparietal sulcus. For the most
part, the allocation of an activation to one side or other of the
intraparietal sulcus is clear. In some cases, because the data are
group data, the activations cannot be ascribed with complete certainty
to one bank of the intraparietal sulcus or the other. Even in these
cases, however, it remains certain that both tasks activate the
intraparietal sulcal region and that the VS activations are more
ventral and anterior to the RS activations, suggesting that the VS and
RS activations are always on the lateral or medial intraparietal sulcal
banks, respectively. Viewed in the coronal plane, the intraparietal
sulcus lies at ~45° to the main rostrocaudal and mediolateral axes
of the brain (Fig. 5). This means that the lateral and medial banks of
the intraparietal sulcus are not distinguished in a simple way by either their relative dorsoventral or mediolateral positions [the conventional Talairach and Tournoux (1988) y and
x axes]. The lateral bank is, in general, both ventral and
lateral to the medial bank of the intraparietal sulcus. The VS
activations were both ventral and lateral to the RS activations. This
can be seen in the series of coronal sections (Fig. 5). Moreover, the
VS activations in the posterior intraparietal sulcus were rostral to
those recorded in the RS paradigm. The more ventral and rostral
position of the VS activations with respect to the RS activations can
be appreciated in the sagittal section (Fig. 6). In summary, the RS and
VS activations around the posterior intraparietal sulcus were
differentially localized in all three of the standard brain axes,
rostrocaudal, mediolateral, and dorsoventral. That the RS and VS
locations are distinct in all three axes makes it difficult to
figuratively summarize their relative positions in just a single
standard brain section. For this reason RS and VS activations are also
shown on a brain section orthogonal to the main axes of the
intraparietal sulcus; the differential localization of VS and RS
activations are now immediately clear (Fig. 7). The more rostral,
lateral, and ventral position of the VS activations compared with the
RS activations can also be appreciated in a 3-D view (Fig. 8).
The positions of posterior intraparietal VS and RS activation peaks
have been plotted graphically in Figure 9. In this figure all
activations have been plotted in the left hemisphere (if an activation
peak was at coordinate 16, 66, 48 then it has been plotted at 16,
66, 48). Again the separation of the two areas of activation is
clear. It can be seen that the separation of VS- and RS-related
activations is not simply the artifactual consequence of their
existence in different hemispheres.
The positions of VS and RS activation peaks in the parietal cortex are
summarized in Table 1. It is clear, once
again, that the VS and the RS paradigms are associated with distinct
activation clusters. The VS paradigm is associated with activation in
the parieto-occipital region (PO) and the lateral intraparietal sulcus (LIP). The RS paradigm is associated with activation in the medial intraparietal sulcus (MIP), the adjacent posterior SPL, including the
dorsomedial surface (PEp), and the anterior intraparietal sulcus
(AIP).
The distinct clustering of VS and RS activations can be discerned
according to three criteria. The first criterion is the number of
activations recorded in each region; there are more VS than RS
activations in PO and LIP. There are more RS than VS activations in
MIP, PEp, and AIP. Because the more posterior parietal peaks (LIP, PO,
MIP, and PEp areas) are fairly close to one another we tested whether
the localization of activation peaks from the two tasks, VS and RS, was
statistically distinct. A MANOVA test of the x,
y, and z coordinates of the peaks recorded in the
two tasks revealed a statistically significant interaction between coordinate position and task (F = 4.212; df = 2, 16; p = 0.034), showing that the two tasks were
associated with activations in statistically separable regions of the
posterior parietal cortex.
The second criterion is which task produces activations with the
highest significance values in a given area; the significance values of
VS peaks are higher than the significance values of RS peaks in PO and
LIP. The opposite is true in MIP, PEp, and AIP. The third criterion is
the relative distribution of activations, produced with each paradigm,
with high and low significance values. The significance values of VS
activations are higher in LIP and PO than they are in MIP, PEp, and
AIP. The significance values of RS activations are higher in MIP, PEp,
and AIP than they are in PO and LIP. To test the statistical
significance of these differences, we directly compared BOLD signal in
the two tasks (i.e., RS switch stay against VS switch stay) in a
20,000 mm3 region around the left
intraparietal sulcus using the same methods and procedures as the main
analyses. We were able to confirm statistically significant greater
activation in the RS task than the VS task in the same MIP, PEp, and
AIP region that had been identified in the analysis of the simple RS
task results (Table 2). We were able to
confirm statistically greater activation in the VS task than the RS
task in the same LIP region (Table 2) that had been identified in the
analysis of the simple VS task results. In addition the VS task,
compared with the RS task, was associated with statistically greater
activity in a region just anterior and dorsal to the main region of LIP
activation previously identified ( 30, 45, 54). The anterior and
dorsal shift of this activation probably reflects not just the presence
of VS-related activity in this region but the absence of RS related
activity here. The location of this activation reflects the fact that
the comparison between tasks was not conducted after masking by the
main effect of either original RS or VS analysis (which would entail
prejudging the task separation being tested) or the task general main
of effect of switching (which might preclude the identification of an
area strongly associated with one task but not at all associated with
another task).
 |
DISCUSSION |
Event-related fMRI was used to compare visual attentional and
visuomotor intentional task-switching paradigms, VS and RS. In both
cases, subjects' responses were significantly slower on the first
trial after a switch. Switching in VS was associated with activation in
the posterior lateral intraparietal sulcus and the parieto-occipital
region. Switching in RS was associated with activation in the medial
intraparietal sulcus, adjacent posterior SPL and dorsomedial parietal
cortex, and the anterior lateral intraparietal sulcus.
Visual attention and visuomotor intention
The first task, VS, involved attentional task switching. Subjects
used a changing rule to select one of two visual stimuli for attention.
The selection rule is based on either the color or shape of the
stimuli. It is known that attentional selection for a the color or
shape of a stimulus also entails spatial attention to its location
(Tsal and Lavie, 1988 , 1993 ). The notion of visual attention is a
familiar one, and it is established that it is associated with the
posterior parietal cortex (Corbetta et al., 1993 , 1995 , 2000 ; Fink et
al., 1997a ,b ; Nobre et al., 1997 ; Coull and Nobre, 1998 ; Le et al.,
1998 ; Corbetta and Shulman, 1999 ; Gitelman et al., 1999 ; Hopfinger et
al., 2000 ; Macaluso et al., 2000 ; Vandenberghe et al., 2000 ). Different
studies, however, have emphasized the importance of either inferior,
superior, or even medial parietal cortex or all these areas. In the
present study only a limited region was activated that was clearly
ventral to the posterior parietal RS activation, suggesting a location in the LIP. Nobre et al. (1996 , 1997 ) and Corbetta et al. (1993 , 1995 ,
2000 ) were able to determine that the core visuospatial attention region is within the intraparietal sulcus, although they were
unable to ascertain its position relative to limb movement areas. The
limited extent of activation in the VS experiment may reflect the
limited use of manual responses by subjects; subjects only made overt
responses on 20% of trials, so the VS results are unlikely to reflect
attentional modulation of response-related processes. The RS results
suggest that attentional modulation in the SPL and medial parietal
cortex is related to manual response components.
The second paradigm, RS, involved intentional task-switching. Switching
involved changing the rules for movement selection rather than changing
the rules for stimulus selection. Although the experimental
manipulation used in RS is distinct to that used in many sensory
attentional experiments, it is clear that the switch-stay activation
in RS is the consequence of the operation of attention; on average,
subjects saw the same stimuli and made the same responses during the
switch and stay epochs, the only difference was the task-switching
context in which stimuli and responses occurred. There was little
overlap between the parietal areas activated on switching in RS and VS.
RS activations were more dorsal and medial and included the MIP and
area PEp (Von Economo and Koskinas, 1925 ) in the posterior SPL
and extending onto the adjacent dorsomedial surface. In addition, there
were several foci in the anterior IPL, the supramarginal gyrus, and the
adjacent AIP. In comparison, only one activation was recorded in
this region in the VS task.
The notion of motor-related attention, or intention (Boussaoud and
Wise, 1993a ,b ), is less familiar than that of visual attention. It is,
however, conceivable that there are covert intentional processes that
are related to overt limb movements in much the same way that covert
visual attention and orienting are related to overt eye movements
(Sheliga et al., 1994 ; Snyder et al., 1997 ; Colby and Goldberg, 1999 ).
It has previously been shown that intention depends on the
supramarginal gyrus and AIP; these areas are activated more when
subjects covertly attend to or prepare movements (Deiber et al.,
1996 ; Krams et al., 1998 ; Rushworth et al., 2001b ). Lesions and TMS
inactivation in this region prevent subjects from switching attention
from one movement to another (Rushwoth et al., 1997 , 2001a). The
present results demonstrate complementary specializations in LIP and
AIP for visual attention and visuomotor intention. The complementary
specializations of LIP and AIP may underlie their activation in overt
eye and hand movement tasks, respectively (Kawashima et al., 1996 , De
Souza et al., 2000 ).
The more posterior superior parietal areas, MIP and PEp, have not been
conspicuously implicated in previous studies of covert motor intention.
Such studies simply required subjects to attend to an upcoming movement
or to switch attention from one movement to another. The RS task,
however, is more complex; it requires a switch from one visuomotor
transformation to another, and MIP and PEp may be critical for this
distinct attentional process. Other studies have considered a role for
posterior parietal cortex in learning visuomotor rules, the production
of spatially incompatible responses, or visually guided reaching
(Grafton et al., 1992 , 1996 ; Clower et al., 1996; Iacoboni et al.,
1996 ; Deiber et al., 1997 ; Faillenot et al., 1997 ; Honda et al.,
1998 ). However, as with the case of visual attention, there has
been disagreement about the precise region that is
critical. Moreover, there has been confusion about whether activations
recorded in such tasks are the consequence of their visual attentional
demands or, vice versa, whether visual attention tasks manipulate
visuomotor response factors. The current results demonstrate an
anatomical distinction between both processes.
Wise et al. (1997a) have discussed how parietal cortex, in conjunction
with premotor cortex, may be important for learned visuomotor
transformations, although its precise role has been uncertain (Halsband
and Passingham, 1982 ; Rushworth et al., 1997a ). It seems clear that
frontal lobe areas are more important in the learning of such
transformations (Wise and Murray, 2000 ). The current results suggest
one role of parietal areas MIP and PEp may be intentional switches
between visuomotor transformation rules.
The organization of the parietal lobe in monkeys and people
The distribution of VS- and RS-related areas around the
intraparietal sulcus suggest that the human intraparietal sulcus and the surrounding parietal cortex has a similar organization to that of
the macaque monkey.
The VS task was associated with modulation in human LIP and PO. Areas
LIP and PO occupy similar locations in posterior lateral intraparietal
and parieto-occipital cortex in the macaque and contain visually
responsive cells that are important in visual attention and oculomotor
control (Galletti et al., 1993 , 1995 ; Andersen et al.,
1998 ;Colby and Goldberg, 1999 ).
Cells on the posterior MIP of the macaque have distinct properties;
they also respond to visual stimuli, but their activity is related more
closely to limb movements than eye movements (Colby and Duhamel, 1991 ;
Snyder et al., 1997 ; Eskander and Assad, 1999 ). Similar visuomotor
activity has also been found in adjacent tissue in the most posterior
SPL, the mediodorsal parietal cortex, and the most dorsal
parieto-occipital cortices (PEc, MDP, V6A) (Caminiti et al.,
1996 ; Galletti et al., 1997 ; Battaglia-Mayer et al., 2000 ; Ferraina et al., 2001 ). Whether each of these areas of the macaque brain have distinct functions remains to be clarified. The same human areas, MIP and PEp, medial and dorsal to those concerned with
visual attention, were activated in RS.
The macaque AIP and adjacent anterior IPL (PF) also have some
visually responsive cells and are related to limb, perhaps particularly hand, movements (Sakata et al., 1999 ). Similar areas in the human parietal cortex were also activated in the RS task.
In summary, the results are consistent with a scheme in which the
intraparietal sulcus divides the parietal cortices in a similar way in
both monkeys and people (Von Bonin and Bailey, 1947 ; Eidelburg
and Galaburda, 1984 ) rather than with the currently more widely
used scheme in which the human IPL is regarded as a novel structure
(Brodmann, 1909 ). Functional areas appear to occupy similar positions
relative to one another and to the main anatomical landmark in the
area, the intraparietal sulcus. In accordance with this scheme, Bremmer
et al. (2001) have recently presented functional data showing that the
human VIP, like macaque VIP, is in the depths of the intraparietal
sulcus. Cross-species anatomical correspondences in the temporal and
frontal lobes have been difficult to establish (Petrides and
Pandya, 1994 ; Preuss, 1995 ), but the organization of the
parietal cortex may have been conserved during primate speciation.
Preuss and Goldman-Rakic (1991) have demonstrated that the
parietal lobe, including the intraparietal sulcus, in the strepsirhine
Galago has a similar organization to that in the anthropoid
macaque. Different parietal areas are concerned with distinct
attentional processes and transformations between incoming sensory
information and movements of either the eye or the limb. The types of
sensorimotor transformations and related attentional processes required
by primates may have remained stable since the development of binocular
vision and reaching and grasping hand and arm movements (Sakata et al.,
1997 ). Because parietal areas are concerned with attention and
sensorimotor transformations, the basic plan for parietal organization
may have been conserved from strepsirhines to humans.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Jan. 24, 2001; revised April 30, 2001; accepted April 30, 2001.
This work was supported by the Royal Society, the Medical Research
Council (United Kingdom), the Canadian Institutes of Health Research,
and the Canadian Foundation for Innovation. We gratefully acknowledge
the advice of K. Worsley, C. Liao, V. Petre, B. Pike, and H. Johansen-Berg.
Correspondence should be addressed to Matthew F. S. Rushworth,
Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford,
OX1 3UD, UK. E-mail: matthew.rushworth{at}psy.ox.ac.uk.
 |
REFERENCES |
-
Allport DA,
Styles EA,
Hsieh S
(1994)
Shifting intentional set: exploring the dynamic control of tasks.
In: Attention and performance, Vol 15 (Umilta C,
Moscovitch M,
eds), pp 421-452. Cambridge, MA: MIT.
-
Andersen RA,
Snyder LH,
Batista AP,
Buneo CA,
Cohen YE
(1998)
Posterior parietal areas specialized for eye movements (LIP) and reach (PRR) using a common coordinate frame.
Novartis Found Symp
218:109-122[ISI][Medline].
-
Battaglia-Mayer A,
Ferraina S,
Mitsuda T,
Marconi B,
Genovesio A,
Onorati P,
Lacquaniti F,
Caminiti R
(2000)
Early coding of reaching in the parietooccipital cortex.
J Neurophysiol
83:2374-2391[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Boussaoud D,
Wise SP
(1993a)
Primate frontal cortex: neuronal activity following attentional versus intentional cues.
Exp Brain Res
95:15-27[ISI][Medline].
-
Boussaoud D,
Wise SP
(1993b)
Primate frontal cortex: effects of stimulus and movement.
Exp Brain Res
95:28-40[ISI][Medline].
-
Bremmer F,
Schlack A,
Shah NJ,
Zafiris O,
Kubischik M,
Hoffmann K,
Zilles K,
Fink GR
(2001)
Polymodal motion processing in posterior parietal and premotor cortex: a human fMRI study strongly implies equivalencies between humans and monkeys.
Neuron
29:287-296[ISI][Medline].
-
Brodmann K
(1909)
In: Vergleichende Lokalisationslehre der Grosshirnrinde in ihren Prinzipien dargestellt auf Grund des Zellenbaues. Liepzig: Barth (translated by L. J. Garey (1994), Brodmann's "Localization in the cerebral cortex", London: Smith-Gordon).
-
Caminiti R,
Ferraina S,
Johnson PB
(1996)
The sources of visual information to the primate frontal lobe: a novel role for the superior parietal lobule.
Cereb Cortex
6:319-328[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Colby CL,
Duhamel J-R
(1991)
Heterogeneity of extrastriate visual areas and multiple parietal areas in the macaque monkey.
Neuropsychologia
29:517-537[ISI][Medline].
-
Colby CL,
Goldberg ME
(1999)
Space and attention in parietal cortex.
Annu Rev Neurosci
22:319-349[ISI][Medline].
-
Collins DL,
Neelin P,
Peters TM,
Evans AC
(1994)
Automatic 3D intersubject registration of MR volumetric data in standardized Talairach space.
J Comput Assist Tomogr
18:192-205[ISI][Medline].
-
Corbetta M,
Shulman GL
(1999)
Human cortical mechanisms of visual attention during orienting and search.
In: Attention, space, and action: studies in cognitive neuroscience (Humphreys GW,
Duncan J,
Triesman A,
eds). Oxford: OUP.
-
Corbetta M,
Miezin FM,
Shulman GL,
Petersen SEA
(1993)
A PET study of visuospatial attention.
J Neurosci
13:1202-1226[Abstract].
-
Corbetta M,
Shulman GL,
Miezin FM,
Petersen SE
(1995)
Superior parietal cortex activation during spatial attention shifts and visual feature conjunction.
Science
270:802-804[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Corbetta M,
Kincade JM,
Ollinger JM,
McAvoy MP,
Shulman GL
(2000)
Voluntary orienting is dissociated from target detection in human posterior parietal cortex.
Nat Neurosci
3:292-297[ISI][Medline].
-
Coull JT,
Nobre AC
(1998)
Where and when to pay attention: the neural substrate for directing attention to spatial locations and to time intervals as revealed by both PET and fMRI.
J Neurosci
18:7426-7435[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Deiber M-P,
Ibanez V,
Sadato N,
Hallet M
(1996)
Cerebral structures participating in motor preparation in humans: a positron emission tomography study.
J Neurophysiol
75:233-247[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Deiber M-P,
Wise SP,
Honda M,
Catalan MJ,
Grafman J,
Hallett M
(1997)
Frontal and parietal networks for conditional motor learning: a positron emission tomography study.
J Neurophysiol
78:977-991[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
De Souza JFX,
Dukelow SP,
Gati JS,
Menon RS,
Andersen RA,
Vilis T
(2000)
Eye position signal modulates a human parietal pointing region during memory-guided movements.
J Neurosci
20:5835-5840[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Eidelburg D,
Galaburda AM
(1984)
Inferior parietal lobule: divergent architectonic asymmetries in the human brain.
Arch Neurol
41:843-852[Abstract].
-
Eskander EN,
Assad JA
(1999)
Dissociation of visual, motor and predictive signals in parietal cortex during visual guidance.
Nat Neurosci
2:88-93[ISI][Medline].
-
Evans AC,
Collins DL,
Milner B
(1992)
An MRI-based stereotaxic atlas from 250 young normal subjects.
Soc Neurosci Abstr
18:408.
-
Faillenot I,
Toni I,
Decety J,
Gregoire M-C,
Jeannerod M
(1997)
Visual pathways for object-oriented action and object recognition: functional anatomy with PET.
Cereb Cortex
7:77-85[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Ferraina S,
Battaglia-Mayer A,
Genovesio A,
Marconi B,
Onorati P,
Caminiti R
(2001)
Early coding of visuomanual coordination during reaching in parietal area PEc.
J Neurophysiol
85:462-467[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fink GR,
Dolan RJ,
Halligan PW,
Marshall JC,
Frith CD
(1997a)
Space-based and object-based visual attention: shared and specific neural domains.
Brain
120:2013-2028[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Fink GR,
Halligan PW,
Marshall JC,
Frith CD,
Frackowiak RSJ,
Dolan RJ
(1997b)
Neural mechanisms involved in the processing of global and local aspects of hierarchically organized visual stimuli.
Brain
120:1779-1791[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Galletti C,
Battaglini PP,
Fattori P
(1993)
Parietal neurons encoding spatial locations in craniotopic coordinates.
Exp Brain Res
96:221-229[ISI][Medline].
-
Galletti C,
Battaglini PP,
Fattori P
(1995)
Eye position influence on the parieto-occipital area PO (V6) of the macaque monkey.
Eur J Neurosci
7:2486-2501[ISI][Medline].
-
Galletti C,
Fattori R,
Kutz DF,
Battaglini PP
(1997)
Arm movement related neurons in the visual area V6 of the macaque superior parietal lobule.
Eur J Neurosci
9:410-413[ISI][Medline].
-
Gitelman DR,
Nobre AC,
Parrish TB,
LaBar KS,
Kim YH,
Meyer JR,
Mesulam M
(1999)
A large scale distributed network for covert spatial attention: further anatomical delineation based on stringent behavioural and cognitive controls.
Brain
122:1093-1106[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Grafton ST,
Mazziota JC,
Woods RP,
Phelps ME
(1992)
Human functional anatomy of visually guided finger movements.
Brain
115:565-587[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Grafton ST,
Fagg AH,
Woods RP,
Arbib MA
(1996)
Functional anatomy of pointing and grasping.
Cereb Cortex
6:226-237[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Halsband U,
Passingham RE
(1982)
The role of premotor and parietal cortex in the direction of action.
Brain Res
240:368-372[ISI][Medline].
-
Honda M,
Wise SP,
Weeks RA,
Deiber M-P,
Hallett M
(1998)
Cortical areas with enhanced activation during object centred spatial information processing: a PET study.
Brain
121:2145-2158[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Hopfinger JB,
Buonocore MH,
Mangun GR
(2000)
The neural mechanisms of top-down attentional control.
Nat Neurosci
3:284-291[ISI][Medline].
-
Iacoboni M,
Woods RP,
Mazziotta JC
(1996)
Brain behaviour relationships: evidence from practise effects in spatial stimulus-response compatibility.
J Neurophysiol
76:321-331[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Kawashima R,
Naitoh E,
Matsumura M,
Itoh H,
Ono S,
Satoh K,
Gotoh R,
Koyama M,
Inoue K,
Yoshioka S,
Fukuda H
(1996)
Topographic representation in human intraparietal sulcus of reaching and saccade.
NeuroReport
7:1253-1256[ISI][Medline].
-
Krams M,
Rushworth MFS,
Deiber MP,
Frackowiak RSJ,
Passingham RE
(1998)
The preparation, suppression, and execution of copied movements in the human brain.
Exp Brain Res
120:386-398[ISI][Medline].
-
Le TH,
Pardo JV,
Hu X
(1998)
4 T-fMRI study of nonspatial shifting of selective attention: cerebellar and parietal contributions.
J Neurophysiol
79:1535-1548[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Macaluso E,
Frith CD,
Driver J
(2000)
Modulation of human visual cortex by crossmodal spatial attention.
Science
289:1206-1208[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Nobre AC,
Sebestyen GN,
Gitelman DR,
Mesulam MM,
Frackowiak RSJ,
Frith CD
(1997)
Functional localization of the system for visuo-spatial attention using position emission tomography.
Brain
120:515-533[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Petrides M,
Pandya DN
(1994)
Comparative architectonic analysis of the human and the macaque frontal cortex.
In: Handbook of neuropsychology, Vol 9 (Boller F,
Grafman J,
eds), pp 17-58. Amsterdam: Elsevier.
-
Preuss TM
(1995)
Do rats have prefrontal cortex? The Rose-Woolsey-Akert program reconsidered.
J Comp Neurol
7:1-24.
-
Preuss TM,
Goldman-Rakic PS
(1991)
Architectonics of the parietal and temporal association cortex in the strepsirhine Galago compared to the anthropoid primate Macaca.
J Comp Neurol
310:475-506[ISI][Medline].
-
Rogers RD,
Monsell S
(1995)
The cost of a predictable switch between simple cognitive tasks.
J Exp Psychol Gen
124:207-231.
-
Rushworth MFS,
Nixon PD,
Passingham RE
(1997a)
The parietal cortex and movement. I. Movement selection and reaching.
Exp Brain Res
117:292-310[ISI][Medline].
-
Rushworth MFS,
Nixon PD,
Renowden S,
Wade DT,
Passingham RE
(1997b)
The left parietal cortex and attention to action.
Neuropsychologia
35:1261-1273[ISI][Medline].
-
Rushworth MFS, Hadland KA, Passingham RE, Nobre
AC (1999) Redirecting motor attention and the pre-SMA: rTMS
and ERP recording. Soc Neurosci Abstr 865.14.
-
Rushworth MFS,
Ellison A,
Walsh V
(2001a)
Complementary localization and laterization of orienting and motor attention.
Nat Neurosci
4:656-661[ISI][Medline].
-
Rushworth MFS, Krams M, Passingham RE (2001b) Complementary
lateralization of attention and intention in the human brain. A PET
study. J Cogn Neurosci, in press.
-
Sakata H,
Taira M,
Kusunoki M,
Murata A,
Tanaka Y
(1997)
The TINS lecture. The parietal association cortex in depth perception and visual control of hand action.
Trends Neurosci
20:350-357[ISI][Medline].
-
Sakata H,
Taira M,
Kusunoki M,
Murata A,
Tsutsui K,
Tanaka Y,
Shein WN,
Miyashita Y
(1999)
Neural representation of three dimensional features of manipulation objects with stereopsis.
Exp Brain Res
128:160-169[ISI][Medline].
-
Sheliga BM,
Riggio L,
Rizzolatti G
(1994)
Orienting of attention and eye movements.
Exp Brain Res
98:507-522[ISI][Medline].
-
Snyder LH,
Batista AP,
Andersen RA
(1997)
Coding of intention in the posterior parietal cortex.
Nature
386:167-170[Medline].
-
Snyder LH,
Batista AP,
Andersen RA
(1998)
Change in motor plan, without a change in the spatial locus of attention, modulates activity in posterior parietal cortex.
J Neurophysiol
79:2814-2819[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Talairach J,
Tournoux P
(1988)
In: Co-planar stereotaxic atlas of the human brain. Thieme: Stuttgart.
-
Tsal Y,
Lavie N
(1988)
Attending to colour and shape: the special role of location in selective visual processing.
Percept Psychophys
44:15-21[ISI][Medline].
-
Tsal Y,
Lavie N
(1993)
Location dominance in attending to colour and shape.
J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform
19:131-139[ISI][Medline].
-
Vandenberghe R,
Duncan J,
Arnell KM,
Bishop SJ,
Herrod NJ,
Owen AM,
Minhas PS,
Dupont P,
Pickard JD,
Orban GA
(2000)
Maintaining and shifting attention within left or right hemifield.
Cereb Cortex
10:706-713[Abstract/Free Full Text].
-
Von Bonin G,
Bailey P
(1947)
In: The neocortex of Macaca mulatta. Urbana, IL: University of Illinois.
-
Von Economo C
(1929)
In: The cytoarchitectonics of the human cerebral cortex. London: Oxford UP.
-
Von Economo C,
Koskinas GN
(1925)
In: Die Cytoarchitecktonik der Hirnrinde des erwachsenen Menschen. Berlin: Springer.
-
Wise SP,
Murray EA
(2000)
Arbitrary associations between antecedents and actions.
Trends Neurosci
23:271-276[ISI][Medline].
-
Wise SP,
Boussaoud D,
Johnson PB,
Caminiti R
(1997)
Premotor and parietal cortex: corticortical connectivity and combinatorial computations.
Annu Rev Neurosci
20:25-42[ISI][Medline].
-
Worsley KJ,
Marrett S,
Neelin P,
Vandal AC,
Friston KJ,
Evans AC
(1996)
A unified statistical approach for determining significant signals in images of cerebral activation.
Hum Brain Mapp
4:58-73[ISI].
-
Worsley KJ,
Andermann M,
Koulis T,
MacDonald D,
Evans AC
(1999)
Detecting changes in nonisotropic images.
Hum Brain Mapp
8:98-101[ISI][Medline].
-
Worsley KJ,
Liao C,
Grabove M,
Petre V,
Ha B,
Evans AC
(2000)
A general statistical analysis for fMRI data.
NeuroImage
10:S648.
-
Zarahn E,
Aguirre G,
D'Esposito M
(1997)
A trial-based experimental design for fMRI.
NeuroImage
6:122-138[ISI][Medline].
Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/21145262-10$05.00/0
This article has been cited by other articles:

|
 |

|
 |
 
P. Sumner and M. Husain
At the Edge of Consciousness: Automatic Motor Activation and Voluntary Control
Neuroscientist,
October 1, 2008;
14(5):
474 - 486.
[Abstract]
[PDF]
|
 |
|

|
 |

|
 |
 
D. Baldauf, H. Cui, and R. A. Andersen
The Posterior Parietal Cortex Encodes in Parallel Both Goals for Double-Reach Sequences
J. Neurosci.,
October 1, 2008;
28(40):
10081 - 10089.
| |