Two of the most fundamental mechanisms in biological vision are attention and plasticity. Attention actively selects and enhances visual information most relevant to behavior. Neural plasticity enables the visual system to benefit from perceptual experience. The amount of visual information to learn is infinite, however, so top-down control mechanisms must regulate learning to maintain a balance of plasticity and stability in neural circuitry. This proposal explores how attention modulates perceptual learning according to behavioral goals, such that only attended information will induce durable changes in neural responses throughout multiple stages along the visual pathway. Surprisingly very little neuroimaging work has been devoted to this basic hypothesis. The proposed studies use functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to investigate how attention modulates neural plasticity, as revealed by changes in the blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) signal, an indirect measure of neural activity that can be obtained non-invasively from the human brain. Study 1 will measure plasticity along the visual processing stream to reveal the stage at which attention begins to suppress short-term and long-term cortical plasticity to unattended images. Study 2 will test the hypothesis that cortical plasticity in visual areas is guided by working memory representations of target visual events. Study 3 will examine the relationship between perceptual learning and the fMRI BOLD signal. Altogether, the findings should 1) reveal where attention begins to modulate cortical plasticity to recurrent visual features and images, 2) clarify the function of top-down attentional mechanisms in regulating plasticity, and 3) tighten the complex relationship between learning-related changes in fMRI BOLD signal and enhanced perceptual performance across a wide range of visual tasks and cortical mechanisms. Novel data from whole-brain imaging may guide future electrophysiological or neuropsychological research on top-down control of neural plasticity. More broadly, the results should inform theories of visual recognition and perceptual learning, as well as clinical issues of rehabilitation and recovery from eye disease or injury.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Eye Institute (NEI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01EY014193-05
Application #
7032927
Study Section
Visual Sciences B Study Section (VISB)
Program Officer
Oberdorfer, Michael
Project Start
2003-04-01
Project End
2007-08-31
Budget Start
2006-04-01
Budget End
2007-08-31
Support Year
5
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$279,402
Indirect Cost
Name
Yale University
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
043207562
City
New Haven
State
CT
Country
United States
Zip Code
06520
Kuhl, Brice A; Chun, Marvin M (2014) Successful remembering elicits event-specific activity patterns in lateral parietal cortex. J Neurosci 34:8051-60
Cowen, Alan S; Chun, Marvin M; Kuhl, Brice A (2014) Neural portraits of perception: reconstructing face images from evoked brain activity. Neuroimage 94:12-22
Moore, Katherine S; Yi, Do-Joon; Chun, Marvin (2013) The effect of attention on repetition suppression and multivoxel pattern similarity. J Cogn Neurosci 25:1305-14
Kuhl, Brice A; Johnson, Marcia K; Chun, Marvin M (2013) Dissociable neural mechanisms for goal-directed versus incidental memory reactivation. J Neurosci 33:16099-109
Ward, Emily J; Chun, Marvin M; Kuhl, Brice A (2013) Repetition suppression and multi-voxel pattern similarity differentially track implicit and explicit visual memory. J Neurosci 33:14749-57
Turk-Browne, Nicholas B; Golomb, Julie D; Chun, Marvin M (2012) Complementary attentional components of successful memory encoding. Neuroimage 66C:553-562
Norman-Haignere, Samuel V; McCarthy, Gregory; Chun, Marvin M et al. (2012) Category-selective background connectivity in ventral visual cortex. Cereb Cortex 22:391-402
Cohen, Michael A; Cavanagh, Patrick; Chun, Marvin M et al. (2012) The attentional requirements of consciousness. Trends Cogn Sci 16:411-7
Kuhl, Brice A; Bainbridge, Wilma A; Chun, Marvin M (2012) Neural reactivation reveals mechanisms for updating memory. J Neurosci 32:3453-61
Chun, Marvin M; Johnson, Marcia K (2011) Memory: enduring traces of perceptual and reflective attention. Neuron 72:520-35

Showing the most recent 10 out of 42 publications