Huettel S A, Güzeldere G, McCarthy G
Duke University, Durham, NC 27710, USA.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2001 Oct 1;13(7):1006-18. doi: 10.1162/089892901753165908.
We investigated using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) the neural processes associated with performance of a change-detection task. In this task, two versions of the same picture are presented in alternation, separated by a brief mask interval. Even when the two pictures greatly differ (e.g., as when a building is in different locations), subjects report that identification of the change is difficult and often take 30 or more seconds to identify the change. This phenomenon of "change blindness" provides a powerful and novel paradigm for segregating components of visual attention using fMRI that can otherwise be confounded in short-duration tasks. By using a response-contingent event-related analysis technique, we successfully dissociated brain regions associated with different processing components of a visual change-detection task. Activation in the calcarine cortex was associated with task onset, but did not vary with the duration of visual search. In contrast, the pattern of activation in dorsal and ventral visual areas was temporally associated with the duration of visual search. As such, our results support a distinction between brain regions whose activation is modulated by attentional demands of the visual task (extrastriate cortex) and those that are not affected by it (primary visual cortex). A second network of areas including central sulcus, insular, and inferior frontal cortical areas, along with the thalamus and basal ganglia, showed phasic activation tied to the execution of responses. Finally, parietal and frontal regions showed systematic deactivations during task performance, consistent with previous reports that these regions may be associated with nontask semantic processing. We conclude that detection of change, when transient visual cues are not present, requires activation of extrastriate visual regions and frontal regions responsible for eye movements. These results suggest that studies of change blindness can inform understanding of more general attentional processing.
我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)研究了与变化检测任务执行相关的神经过程。在这个任务中,同一幅图片的两个版本交替呈现,中间有一个短暂的掩蔽间隔。即使这两张图片差异很大(例如,一座建筑物位于不同位置时),受试者报告说识别变化很困难,通常需要30秒或更长时间才能识别出变化。这种“变化盲视”现象为利用fMRI分离视觉注意成分提供了一个强大而新颖的范式,否则这些成分在短时间任务中可能会相互混淆。通过使用基于反应的事件相关分析技术,我们成功地分离了与视觉变化检测任务不同处理成分相关的脑区。距状沟皮质的激活与任务开始有关,但不随视觉搜索持续时间而变化。相比之下,背侧和腹侧视觉区域的激活模式在时间上与视觉搜索持续时间相关。因此,我们的结果支持在其激活受视觉任务注意需求调节的脑区(纹外皮质)和不受其影响的脑区(初级视觉皮质)之间进行区分。包括中央沟、岛叶和额下皮质区域以及丘脑和基底神经节在内的第二个区域网络显示出与反应执行相关的阶段性激活。最后,顶叶和额叶区域在任务执行期间表现出系统性失活,这与之前的报告一致,即这些区域可能与非任务语义处理有关。我们得出结论,在没有短暂视觉线索的情况下检测变化需要激活负责眼动的纹外视觉区域和额叶区域。这些结果表明,对变化盲视的研究可以为更一般的注意处理的理解提供信息。