di Pellegrino G, Wise S P
Laboratory of Neurophysiology, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health Animal Center, Poolesville, MD 20837.
Somatosens Mot Res. 1993;10(3):245-62. doi: 10.3109/08990229309028835.
We examined neuronal activity in the primate premotor (PM) and prefrontal (PF) areas during a demanding spatial matching task. On each behavioral trial, a rhesus monkey moved its forelimb when a visual stimulus, called the "prime stimulus," reappeared at a previously cued location. Because it triggered a movement, the part of space cued by the prime stimulus had to be either remembered or attended during the time between prime stimulus presentations. Between the first and second appearances of the prime stimulus, behaviorally irrelevant visual stimuli could appear at one or several locations other than that of the prime stimulus. We could thereby examine the activity that followed a stimulus when it was attended versus when it was irrelevant and presumably unattended. We found that visuospatial attention affected neuronal activity in both the motor and "nonmotor" parts of the frontal cortex. The magnitude of attention effects exceeded that previously reported--a finding that probably resulted from the intensive attentional demands of the present task.
我们在一项要求较高的空间匹配任务中,研究了灵长类动物运动前区(PM)和前额叶(PF)区域的神经元活动。在每一次行为试验中,当一个被称为“启动刺激”的视觉刺激在先前提示的位置重新出现时,一只恒河猴移动其前肢。由于它触发了一次运动,在启动刺激呈现的间隔时间内,启动刺激所提示的空间部分必须被记住或被关注。在启动刺激的第一次和第二次出现之间,行为上不相关的视觉刺激可能会出现在除启动刺激位置之外的一个或几个位置。由此我们可以研究当刺激被关注时与当它不相关且大概未被关注时所伴随的活动。我们发现视觉空间注意影响了额叶皮层运动和“非运动”部分的神经元活动。注意效应的幅度超过了先前报道的——这一发现可能是由于当前任务对注意力的高度要求所致。