We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
A Neuronal Population Measure of Attention Predicts Behavioral Performance on Individual Trials.
- Authors
Cohen, Marlene R.; Maunsell, John H. R.
- Abstract
Visual attention improves perception for an attended location or feature and also modulates the responses of sensory neurons. In laboratory studies, the sensory stimuli and task instructions are held constant within an attentional condition, but despite experimenters' best efforts, attention likely varies from moment to moment. Because most previous studies have focused on single neurons, it has been impossible to use neuronal responses to identify attentional fluctuations and determine whether these are associated with changes in behavior. We show that an instantaneous measure of attention based on the responses of a modest number of neurons in area V4 of the rhesus monkey (Macaca mulatta) can reliably predict large changes in an animal's ability to perform a difficult psychophysical task. Unexpectedly, this measure shows that the amount of attention allocated at any moment to locations in opposite hemifields is uncorrelated, suggesting that animals allocate attention to each stimulus independently rather than moving their attentional focus from one location to another.
- Subjects
VISUAL perception; SENSORY neurons; SENSORY stimulation; FLUCTUATIONS (Physics); RHESUS monkeys; ANIMAL behavior
- Publication
Journal of Neuroscience, 2010, Vol 30, Issue 45, p15241
- ISSN
0270-6474
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2171-10.2010