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Read this article for Friday. [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature 1993; 363 : 345-347. Attention as Information Selection. consider a simple visual scene:. Attention as Information Selection.
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Read this article for Friday [1]Chelazzi L, Miller EK, Duncan J, Desimone R. A neural basis for visual search in inferior temporal cortex. Nature 1993; 363: 345-347.
Attention as Information Selection • consider a simple visual scene:
Attention as Information Selection • What if the scene and task gets more complex: “Point to the red vertical line”? • What has to happen in order for this task to be accomplished?
Attention as Information Selection • One conceptualization of attention is that it is the process by which irrelevant neural representations are disregarded (deemphasized? suppressed?) • Another subtly different conceptualization is that attention is a process by which the neural representations of relevant stimuli are enhanced (emphasized? biased?)
Attention as Information Selection • These ideas apply to other modalities • auditory “Cocktail Party” problem • somatosensory “I don’t feel my socks” problem
Early Selection • Early Selection model postulated that attention acted as a strict gate at the lowest levels of sensory processing • Based on concept of a limited capacity bottleneck
Late Selection • Late Selection models postulated that attention acted on later processing stages (not sensory)
Early Selection • Early Selection model was intuitive and explained most data but failed to explain some findings • Shadowing studies found that certain information could “intrude” into the attended stream • Subject’s name, loud noises, etc.
Late vs. Early • Various hybrid models have been proposed • Early attenuation of non-attended input • Late enhancement of attended input
Modulation of Auditory Pathways attending LEFT Ignoring RIGHT • Hillyard et al. (1960s) showed attention effects in human auditory pathway using ERP • Selective listening task using headphones • Every few minutes the attended side was reversed • Thus they could measure the brain response to identical stimuli when attended or unattended beep beep beep beep boop beep beep beep beep boop beep beep
Modulation of Auditory Pathways • Result: ERP elicited by attended and unattended stimuli diverges by about 90ms post stimulus • Long before response is made • Probably in primary or nearby auditory cortex
Modulation of Auditory Pathways • Other groups have found ERP modulation even earlier – as early as Brainstem Auditory Response • Probably no robust modulation as low as cochlea • by ~40 ms, feed forward sweep is already well into auditory and associated cortex • Thus ERP effects may reflect recurrent rather than feed forward processes
Intracranial Recordings of Attentional Selection In Vision • Moran and Desimone (1985) • “Classical” RF prediction: there should be no difference in responses in these two conditions
Intracranial Recordings of Attentional Selection In Vision • Moran and Desimone (1985) • Result: Response to “Sample” Response to “Sample” Response to Target Response to Target “effective” stimulus at unattended location – attention spotlight has selected object with features to which this neuron is not tuned “effective” stimulus at attended location – attention spotlight has selected object with features to which this neuron is tuned
Intracranial Recordings of Attentional Selection in Vision • Moran and Desimone (1985) • Result: • Neuron responds vigorously only if its effective stimulus is attended • Interesting caveat: this only applies when there is an ineffective stimulus (to which the monkey attends) present in the V4 RF • When the ineffective stimulus is outside of the cell’s RF, its responses are largely unmodulated