Newman Daniel P, Loughnane Gerard M, Kelly Simon P, O'Connell Redmond G, Bellgrove Mark A
Monash Institute for Cognitive and Clinical Neurosciences, School of Psychological Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria 3800, Australia.
School of Engineering.
J Neurosci. 2017 Mar 22;37(12):3378-3385. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3512-16.2017. Epub 2017 Feb 27.
Healthy subjects tend to exhibit a bias of visual attention whereby left hemifield stimuli are processed more quickly and accurately than stimuli appearing in the right hemifield. It has long been held that this phenomenon arises from the dominant role of the right cerebral hemisphere in regulating attention. However, methods that would enable more precise understanding of the mechanisms underpinning visuospatial bias have remained elusive. We sought to finely trace the temporal evolution of spatial biases by leveraging a novel bilateral dot motion detection paradigm. In combination with electroencephalography, this paradigm enables researchers to isolate discrete neural signals reflecting the key neural processes needed for making these detection decisions. These include signals for spatial attention, early target selection, evidence accumulation, and motor preparation. Using this method, we established that three key neural markers accounted for unique between-subject variation in visuospatial bias: hemispheric asymmetry in posterior α power measured before target onset, which is related to the distribution of preparatory attention across the visual field; asymmetry in the peak latency of the early N2c target-selection signal; and, finally, asymmetry in the onset time of the subsequent neural evidence-accumulation process with earlier onsets for left hemifield targets. Our development of a single paradigm to dissociate distinct processing components that track the temporal evolution of spatial biases not only advances our understanding of the neural mechanisms underpinning normal visuospatial attention bias, but may also in the future aid differential diagnoses in disorders of spatial attention. The significance of this research is twofold. First, it shows that individual differences in how humans direct their attention between left and right space reflects physiological differences in how early the brain starts to accumulate evidence for the existence of a visual target. Second, the novel methods developed here may have particular relevance to disorders of attention, such as unilateral spatial neglect. In the case of spatial neglect, pathological inattention to left space could have multiple underlying causes, including biased attention, impaired decision formation, or a motor deficit related to one side of space. Our development of a single paradigm to dissociate each of these components may aid in supporting more precise differential diagnosis in such heterogeneous disorders.
健康受试者往往表现出视觉注意力偏向,即左半视野刺激比右半视野出现的刺激处理得更快、更准确。长期以来,人们一直认为这种现象源于右半球在调节注意力方面的主导作用。然而,能够更精确理解视觉空间偏向背后机制的方法仍然难以捉摸。我们试图通过利用一种新颖的双侧点运动检测范式来精细追踪空间偏向的时间演变。结合脑电图,这种范式使研究人员能够分离出反映做出这些检测决策所需关键神经过程的离散神经信号。这些信号包括空间注意力信号、早期目标选择信号、证据积累信号和运动准备信号。使用这种方法,我们确定了三个关键神经标记物解释了视觉空间偏向中受试者间独特的差异:目标开始前测量的后α波功率的半球不对称性,这与准备性注意力在视野中的分布有关;早期N2c目标选择信号峰值潜伏期的不对称性;最后,后续神经证据积累过程开始时间的不对称性,左半视野目标的开始时间更早。我们开发了一种单一范式来分离追踪空间偏向时间演变的不同处理成分,这不仅推进了我们对正常视觉空间注意力偏向背后神经机制的理解,而且未来可能有助于空间注意力障碍的鉴别诊断。这项研究的意义有两个方面。首先,它表明人类在左右空间之间引导注意力的方式上的个体差异反映了大脑开始积累视觉目标存在证据的时间的生理差异。其次,这里开发的新方法可能与注意力障碍,如单侧空间忽视特别相关。在空间忽视的情况下,对左侧空间的病理性注意力不集中可能有多种潜在原因,包括注意力偏向、决策形成受损或与一侧空间相关的运动缺陷。我们开发的单一范式来分离这些成分中的每一个,可能有助于在这种异质性疾病中支持更精确的鉴别诊断。