LUMINANCE AND SPATIAL ATTENTION EFFECTS ON EARLY VISUAL PROCESSING

被引:279
|
作者
JOHANNES, S
MUNTE, TF
HEINZE, HJ
MANGUN, GR
机构
[1] UNIV CALIF DAVIS, CTR NEUROSCI, DAVIS, CA 95616 USA
[2] HANNOVER MED SCH, DEPT NEUROL, HANNOVER, GERMANY
[3] OTTO VONGUERICKE UNIV, DEPT CLIN NEUROPHYSIOL, MAGDEBURG, GERMANY
[4] UNIV CALIF DAVIS, DEPT PSYCHOL, DAVIS, CA 95616 USA
来源
COGNITIVE BRAIN RESEARCH | 1995年 / 2卷 / 03期
关键词
SELECTIVE ATTENTION; SPATIAL ATTENTION; VISUAL ATTENTION; EVENT-RELATED POTENTIAL; ERP; LUMINANCE; TOPOGRAPHY; HUMAN;
D O I
10.1016/0926-6410(95)90008-X
中图分类号
TP18 [人工智能理论];
学科分类号
081104 ; 0812 ; 0835 ; 1405 ;
摘要
Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded from healthy subjects in response to unilaterally flashed high and low luminance bar stimuli presented randomly to left and right field locations. Their task was to covertly and selectively attend to either the left or right stimulus locations (separate blocks) in order to detect infrequent shorter target bars of either luminance. Independent of attention, higher stimulus luminance resulted in higher ERP amplitudes for the posterior N95 (80-110 ms), occipital P1 (110-140 ms), and parietal N1 (130-180 ms). Brighter stimuli also resulted in shorter peak latency for the occipital N1 component (135-220 ms); this effect was not observed for the N1 components over parietal, central or frontal regions. Significant attention-related amplitude modulations were obtained for the occipital P1, occipital, parietal and central N1, the occipital and parietal P2, and the parietal N2 components; these components were larger to stimuli at the attended location. In contrast to the relatively short latencies of both spatial attention and luminance effects, the first interaction between luminance and spatial attention effects was observed for the P3 component to the target stimuli (350-750 ms). This suggests that interactions of spatial attention and stimulus luminance previously reported for reaction time measures may not reflect the earliest stages of sensory/perceptual processing. Differences in the way in which luminance and attention affected the occipital P1, occipital N1 and parietal N1 components suggest dissociations among these ERPs in the mechanisms of visual and attentional processing they reflect, Nonetheless, scalp current density mappings of the attention effects throughout the latency ranges of the P1 and N1 components show the most prominent attention-related activity to be in lateral occipital scalp areas. Such a pattern is consistent with the spatially selective filtering of information into the ventral stream of visual processing which is responsible for complex feature analysis and object identification.
引用
收藏
页码:189 / 205
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Human perception of objects - Early visual processing of spatial form defined by luminance, color, texture, motion and binocular disparity
    Westheimer, G
    SCIENCE, 2000, 288 (5475) : 2324 - 2324
  • [32] Grouping effects on spatial attention in visual search
    Kim, MS
    Cave, KR
    JOURNAL OF GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 126 (04): : 326 - 352
  • [33] Surprise? Early visual novelty processing is not modulated by attention
    Tarbi, Elise C.
    Sun, Xue
    Holcomb, Phillip J.
    Daffner, Kirk R.
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2011, 48 (05) : 624 - 632
  • [34] The Relationship between Attention, Visual Spatial Processing, and Visual Memory in Older Adults
    Wald, D. M.
    Kearns, L.
    Whiteside, D. M.
    CLINICAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGIST, 2012, 26 (03) : 436 - 437
  • [35] Source localization of visual processing during spatial attention.
    Di Russo, F
    Martinez, A
    Hillyard, SA
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2000, : 90 - 90
  • [36] Spatial attention modulates feature crosstalk in visual word processing
    Risko, Evan F.
    Stolz, Jennifer A.
    Besner, Derek
    ATTENTION PERCEPTION & PSYCHOPHYSICS, 2010, 72 (04) : 989 - 998
  • [37] Spatial attention modulates feature crosstalk in visual word processing
    Evan F. Risko
    Jennifer A. Stolz
    Derek Besner
    Attention, Perception, & Psychophysics, 2010, 72 : 989 - 998
  • [38] Properties of spatial attention in conscious and nonconscious visual information processing
    Tapia, Evelina
    Breitmeyer, Bruno G.
    Broyles, Elizabeth C.
    CONSCIOUSNESS AND COGNITION, 2011, 20 (02) : 426 - 431
  • [39] Featural, but not spatial, attention modulates unconscious processing of visual stimuli
    Kanai, R
    Tsuchiya, N
    Verstraten, FAJ
    PERCEPTION, 2004, 33 : 8 - 8
  • [40] Bilateral competitive processing of visual spatial attention in the human brain
    Hilgetag, CC
    Kötter, R
    Théoret, H
    Classen, J
    Wolters, A
    Pascual-Leone, A
    NEUROCOMPUTING, 2003, 52-4 : 793 - 798