Müller Notger G, Kleinschmidt Andreas
Cognitive Neurology Unit, Department of Neurology, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, 60590 Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2003 Oct 29;23(30):9812-6. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.23-30-09812.2003.
We investigated the interaction between object- and space-based attention by measuring activity in early visual cortex. After central cueing, when subjects directed attention to a spatially defined part of an object, activity in early visual areas was enhanced at corresponding retinotopic representations but also at representations of other locations covered by the object. Different from the assumption of automatic attentional "spreading" within an object, however, activity was greater for representations of cued than of uncued locations on the same object. These findings support an interaction of object-based spatial selection with object-independent spatial mechanisms in directing attention. When the target stimulus did not appear at the expected location, we found higher activation in areas representing other locations on the same object than equidistant locations on other objects. Objects, hence, also guide spatial search, and this may account for the behaviorally observed delay in processing parts of an unattended object.
我们通过测量早期视觉皮层的活动来研究基于物体和基于空间的注意力之间的相互作用。在中央提示之后,当受试者将注意力指向物体在空间上定义的部分时,早期视觉区域的活动在相应的视网膜拓扑表征处增强,但在物体覆盖的其他位置的表征处也增强。然而,与物体内自动注意力“扩散”的假设不同,同一物体上提示位置的表征比未提示位置的表征活动更强。这些发现支持了基于物体的空间选择与独立于物体的空间机制在引导注意力方面的相互作用。当目标刺激未出现在预期位置时,我们发现在代表同一物体上其他位置的区域比代表其他物体上等距位置的区域有更高的激活。因此,物体也会引导空间搜索,这可能解释了行为上观察到的处理未被注意物体部分时的延迟。