Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Weesperplein 4, 1081XA Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Amsterdam Brain and Cognition, University of Amsterdam, Weesperplein 4, 1081XA Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Psychology, University of Amsterdam, Weesperplein 4, 1081XA Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Neuroimage. 2016 Jan 15;125:25-35. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.09.058. Epub 2015 Oct 3.
Attention--the ability to attend to some things while ignoring others - can be best described as an emergent property of many neural mechanisms, facilitatory and inhibitory, working together to resolve competition for processing resources and control of behavior. Previous EEG and MEG studies examining the neural mechanisms underlying facilitation and inhibition of stimulus processing typically used paradigms requiring alternating shifts of attention in the spatial domain, with stimuli occurring at both attended and unattended locations. These studies generally observed greater pre-stimulus alpha oscillations over task-irrelevant vs. relevant posterior regions and bilateral attentional modulations of early sensory processing. In contrast, in the current series of experiments, participants continuously attended to only one hemifield and stimuli were only presented at the attended location, affording us an opportunity to elucidate the inhibitory and facilitatory effects of attention in the brain in a context in which spatial relevance was fixed. We found that continuous attention to one hemifield did not modulate prestimulus alpha activity in ipsilateral regions but did result in a perfectly lateralized P1 attention effect to ipsilateral posterior regions. Moreover, we found a bilateral N1 effect. These findings suggest that pre-stimulus alpha activity, the P1 and the N1 reflect qualitatively different aspects of attention; While pre-stimulus alpha-band activity may reflect a top-down inhibitory mechanism that critically depends on functional competition between task-relevant and irrelevant sensory regions, the ipsilateral P1 effect may reflect stimulus-triggered blocking of sensory processing in irrelevant networks, and the N1 effect facilitation of task-relevant processing.
注意——即专注于某些事物而忽略其他事物的能力——可以被最好地描述为许多神经机制共同作用的涌现性质,这些机制既有促进作用,也有抑制作用,共同作用以解决处理资源的竞争和行为的控制。以前的 EEG 和 MEG 研究考察了促进和抑制刺激处理的神经机制,这些研究通常使用需要在空间域中交替转移注意力的范式,刺激发生在注意力集中和未注意到的位置。这些研究通常观察到,与任务不相关的后区比与任务相关的后区有更大的预刺激 alpha 振荡,以及双侧注意对早期感觉处理的调制。相比之下,在当前的一系列实验中,参与者只连续关注一个半视野,刺激只出现在关注的位置,这使我们有机会在空间相关性固定的情况下阐明大脑中注意的抑制和促进作用。我们发现,连续关注一个半视野不会调制同侧区域的预刺激 alpha 活动,但确实导致了对同侧后区的完全侧向 P1 注意效应。此外,我们还发现了双侧 N1 效应。这些发现表明,预刺激 alpha 活动、P1 和 N1 反映了注意的不同方面;虽然预刺激 alpha 波段活动可能反映了一种自上而下的抑制机制,这种机制严重依赖于任务相关和不相关感觉区域之间的功能竞争,但同侧 P1 效应可能反映了刺激触发的不相关网络中感觉处理的阻断,而 N1 效应则促进了任务相关的处理。