Selective attention is known to interact with perceptual organization. In visual scenes, individual objects that are distinct and discriminablemayoccur on their own, or in groups such as a stack of books. The main objective of this study is to probe the neural interaction that occurs between individual objects when attention is directed toward one or more objects. Here we record steady-state visual evoked potentials via electrocorticography to directly assess the responses to individual stimuli and to their interaction. When human participants attend to two adjacent stimuli, prefrontal and parietal cortex shows a selective enhancement of only the neural interaction between stimuli, but not the responses to individual stimuli.Whenonly one stimulus is attended, the neural response to that stimulus is selectively enhanced in prefrontal and parietal cortex. In contrast, early visual areas generally manifest responses to individual stimuli and to their interaction regardless of attentional task, although a subset of the responses is modulated similarly to prefrontal and parietal cortex. Thus, the neural representation of the visual scene as one progresses up the cortical hierarchy becomes more highly task-specific and represents either individual stimuli or their interaction, depending on the behavioral goal. Attention to multiple objects facilitates an integration of objects akin to perceptual grouping.
CITATION STYLE
Kim, Y. J., Tsai, J. J., Ojemann, J., & Verghese, P. (2017). Attention to multiple objects facilitates their integration in prefrontal and parietal cortex. Journal of Neuroscience, 37(19), 4942–4953. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2370-16.2017
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