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Articles, Behavioral/Systems/Cognitive

Asymmetry of Anticipatory Activity in Visual Cortex Predicts the Locus of Attention and Perception

Chad M. Sylvester, Gordon L. Shulman, Anthony I. Jack and Maurizio Corbetta
Journal of Neuroscience 26 December 2007, 27 (52) 14424-14433; https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3759-07.2007
Chad M. Sylvester
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Gordon L. Shulman
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Anthony I. Jack
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Maurizio Corbetta
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Abstract

Humans can use advance information to direct spatial attention before stimulus presentation and respond more accurately to stimuli at the attended location compared with unattended locations. Likewise, spatially directed attention is associated with anticipatory activity in the portion of visual cortex representing the attended location. It is unknown, however, whether and how anticipatory signals predict the locus of spatial attention and perception. Here, we show that prestimulus, preparatory activity is highly correlated across regions representing attended and unattended locations. Comparing activity representing attended versus unattended locations, rather than measuring activity for only one location, dramatically improves the accuracy with which preparatory signals predict the locus of attention, largely by removing this positive correlation common across locations. In V3A, moreover, only the difference in activity between attended and unattended locations predicts whether upcoming visual stimuli will be accurately perceived. These results suggest that the locus of attention is coded in visual cortex by an asymmetry of anticipatory activity between attended and unattended locations and that this asymmetry predicts the accuracy of perception. This coding strategy may bias activity in downstream brain regions to represent the stimulus at the attended location.

  • attention
  • visual cortex
  • fMRI
  • behavior
  • spatial orientation
  • correlated noise
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The Journal of Neuroscience: 27 (52)
Journal of Neuroscience
Vol. 27, Issue 52
26 Dec 2007
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Asymmetry of Anticipatory Activity in Visual Cortex Predicts the Locus of Attention and Perception
Chad M. Sylvester, Gordon L. Shulman, Anthony I. Jack, Maurizio Corbetta
Journal of Neuroscience 26 December 2007, 27 (52) 14424-14433; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3759-07.2007

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Asymmetry of Anticipatory Activity in Visual Cortex Predicts the Locus of Attention and Perception
Chad M. Sylvester, Gordon L. Shulman, Anthony I. Jack, Maurizio Corbetta
Journal of Neuroscience 26 December 2007, 27 (52) 14424-14433; DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3759-07.2007
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