Spatially distributed encoding of covert attentional shifts in human thalamus

Oliver J Hulme, Louise Emma Whiteley, Stewart Shipp

    23 Citationer (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Spatial attention modulates signal processing within visual nuclei of the thalamus--but do other nuclei govern the locus of attention in top-down mode? We examined functional MRI (fMRI) data from three subjects performing a task requiring covert attention to 1 of 16 positions in a circular array. Target position was cued after stimulus offset, requiring subjects to perform target detection from iconic visual memory. We found positionally specific responses at multiple thalamic sites, with individual voxels activating at more than one direction of attentional shift. Voxel clusters at anatomically equivalent sites across subjects revealed a broad range of directional tuning at each site, with little sign of contralateral bias. By reference to a thalamic atlas, we identified the nuclear correspondence of the four most reliably activated sites across subjects: mediodorsal/central-intralaminar (oculomotor thalamus), caudal intralaminar/parafascicular, suprageniculate/limitans, and medial pulvinar/lateral posterior. Hence, the cortical network generating a top-down control signal for relocating attention acts in concert with a spatially selective thalamic apparatus-the set of active nuclei mirroring the thalamic territory of cortical "eye-field" areas, thus supporting theories which propose the visuomotor origins of covert attentional selection.
    OriginalsprogEngelsk
    TidsskriftJournal of Neurology & Neurophysiology
    Vol/bind104
    Udgave nummer6
    Sider (fra-til)3644-56
    Antal sider13
    ISSN2155-9562
    DOI
    StatusUdgivet - dec. 2010

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