Bartsch Mandy V, Loewe Kristian, Merkel Christian, Heinze Hans-Jochen, Schoenfeld Mircea A, Tsotsos John K, Hopf Jens-Max
Leibniz Institute for Neurobiology, 39118 Magdeburg, Germany.
Department of Neurology, Otto-von-Guericke University, 39120 Magdeburg, Germany.
J Neurosci. 2017 Oct 25;37(43):10346-10357. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0666-17.2017. Epub 2017 Sep 25.
Attention can facilitate the selection of elementary object features such as color, orientation, or motion. This is referred to as feature-based attention and it is commonly attributed to a modulation of the gain and tuning of feature-selective units in visual cortex. Although gain mechanisms are well characterized, little is known about the cortical processes underlying the sharpening of feature selectivity. Here, we show with high-resolution magnetoencephalography in human observers (men and women) that sharpened selectivity for a particular color arises from feedback processing in the human visual cortex hierarchy. To assess color selectivity, we analyze the response to a color probe that varies in color distance from an attended color target. We find that attention causes an initial gain enhancement in anterior ventral extrastriate cortex that is coarsely selective for the target color and transitions within ∼100 ms into a sharper tuned profile in more posterior ventral occipital cortex. We conclude that attention sharpens selectivity over time by attenuating the response at lower levels of the cortical hierarchy to color values neighboring the target in color space. These observations support computational models proposing that attention tunes feature selectivity in visual cortex through backward-propagating attenuation of units less tuned to the target. Whether searching for your car, a particular item of clothing, or just obeying traffic lights, in everyday life, we must select items based on color. But how does attention allow us to select a specific color? Here, we use high spatiotemporal resolution neuromagnetic recordings to examine how color selectivity emerges in the human brain. We find that color selectivity evolves as a coarse to fine process from higher to lower levels within the visual cortex hierarchy. Our observations support computational models proposing that feature selectivity increases over time by attenuating the responses of less-selective cells in lower-level brain areas. These data emphasize that color perception involves multiple areas across a hierarchy of regions, interacting with each other in a complex, recursive manner.
注意力能够促进对诸如颜色、方向或运动等基本物体特征的选择。这被称为基于特征的注意力,通常归因于视觉皮层中特征选择性单元的增益和调谐的调制。尽管增益机制已得到充分表征,但对于特征选择性锐化背后的皮层过程却知之甚少。在这里,我们通过对人类观察者(男性和女性)进行高分辨率脑磁图研究表明,对特定颜色的锐化选择性源于人类视觉皮层层次结构中的反馈处理。为了评估颜色选择性,我们分析了对颜色探针的反应,该探针与被关注的颜色目标在颜色距离上有所变化。我们发现,注意力会导致前腹侧纹外皮层最初的增益增强,该区域对目标颜色具有粗略的选择性,并在约100毫秒内转变为更靠后的腹侧枕叶皮层中更尖锐的调谐模式。我们得出结论,随着时间的推移,注意力通过减弱皮层层次结构较低水平对颜色空间中与目标相邻的颜色值的反应来锐化选择性。这些观察结果支持了计算模型,该模型提出注意力通过对目标调谐程度较低的单元的反向传播衰减来调整视觉皮层中的特征选择性。无论是寻找你的汽车、某件特定的衣服,还是仅仅遵守交通信号灯,在日常生活中,我们都必须根据颜色来选择物品。但是注意力是如何让我们选择特定颜色的呢?在这里,我们使用高时空分辨率的神经磁记录来研究人类大脑中颜色选择性是如何出现的。我们发现,颜色选择性在视觉皮层层次结构中从较高水平到较低水平呈现出从粗略到精细的过程。我们的观察结果支持了计算模型,该模型提出特征选择性通过减弱较低级脑区中选择性较低的细胞的反应随时间增加。这些数据强调,颜色感知涉及跨层次区域的多个区域,它们以复杂的递归方式相互作用。