Journal
NATURE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 16, Issue 6, Pages 763-+Publisher
NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nn.3381
Keywords
-
Categories
Funding
- National Eye Institute [EY019684, EY022454]
- Center for Science of Information
- Center for Science of Information, a National Science Foundation Science and Technology Center [CCF-0939370]
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Little is known about how attention changes the cortical representation of sensory information in humans. On the basis of neurophysiological evidence, we hypothesized that attention causes tuning changes to expand the representation of attended stimuli at the cost of unattended stimuli. To investigate this issue, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to measure how semantic representation changed during visual search for different object categories in natural movies. We found that many voxels across occipito-temporal and fronto-parietal cortex shifted their tuning toward the attended category. These tuning shifts expanded the representation of the attended category and of semantically related, but unattended, categories, and compressed the representation of categories that were semantically dissimilar to the target. Attentional warping of semantic representation occurred even when the attended category was not present in the movie; thus, the effect was not a target-detection artifact. These results suggest that attention dynamically alters visual representation to optimize processing of behaviorally relevant objects during natural vision.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available