When covertly attending to regions of space where behaviorally relevant information is expected to occur, processing of visual stimuli appearing at those locations is enhanced. Conversely, if a region of space is expected to be a locus of distracting events, processing of stimuli occurring there is attenuated. This latter suppressive process is reflected by retinotopically specific increases of alpha-band (8-15Hz) oscillatory power in the electroencephalogram. Based on the cellular physiology of similar oscillations in animals, it has been proposed that alpha might serve as a functional gating mechanism. Importantly, the network of neural areas that have been found to contribute to the generation of these rhythms, which include frontal, parietal and occipital visual areas and thalamic nuclei are the same areas implicated in several influential theories of attentional operations. Further characterization of the alpha-band measure is needed to determine the extent to which it is epiphenomenal to attentional deployment mechanisms, or rather an endogenous attentional mechanism per se. To date, the alpha-band measure of selective attention has only been characterized with respect to spatial attention. However, attention can also be deployed to non-spatial visual features, such as color or motion parameters, facilitating the processing of subsequent stimuli with the attended feature, independently of its spatial location. The goal of this project is to further characterize the alpha-band attentional measure by testing its spatiotemporal properties in a purely feature-based attention task. To this end, a classic visual spatial selective attention task will be transformed into a purely featural domain. A symbolic cue will inform participants about a task-relevant feature of an upcoming stimulus, while electrical brain activity is recorded at the scalp. The cue and imperative stimuli will be separated by an interval during which no stimulation occurs, the brain activity during which reflects internal preparatory attentional processes. By varying parameters of the cue (such as its informativeness) and imperative stimuli (such as its duration or coherence) contexts will be created for which different attentional sets are advantageous, allowing the assessment of the extent and limits of alpha-band power increases as a mechanism for suppression in biased competition models.

Public Health Relevance

Project Narrative The ability to bias attention in favor of behaviorally relevant aspects of the environment is critical for good mental health. Disruptions of normal attentional function, and in particular the ability to suppress irrelevant information, has been implicated in many psychiatric disorders such as attention deficit disorder, autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia. The contributions of this project to understanding the neurophysiological mechanisms underlying normal attentional suppression will greatly advance research of disorders involving attention. This work dovetails nicely with ongoing research in our laboratory and with collaborators concerning autism spectrum disorders and schizophrenia.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Predoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (F31)
Project #
1F31MH087077-01A2
Application #
7913692
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-F01-L (20))
Program Officer
Vogel, Michael W
Project Start
2010-04-01
Project End
2013-03-31
Budget Start
2010-04-01
Budget End
2011-03-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2010
Total Cost
$27,512
Indirect Cost
Name
City College of New York
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
603503991
City
New York
State
NY
Country
United States
Zip Code
10031
Belyusar, Daniel; Snyder, Adam C; Frey, Hans-Peter et al. (2013) Oscillatory alpha-band suppression mechanisms during the rapid attentional shifts required to perform an anti-saccade task. Neuroimage 65:395-407
Fiebelkorn, I C; Snyder, A C; Mercier, M R et al. (2013) Cortical cross-frequency coupling predicts perceptual outcomes. Neuroimage 69:126-37
Snyder, Adam C; Foxe, John J (2012) The countervailing forces of binding and selection in vision. Cortex 48:1035-42
Snyder, A C; Shpaner, M; Molholm, S et al. (2012) Visual object processing as a function of stimulus energy, retinal eccentricity and Gestalt configuration: a high-density electrical mapping study. Neuroscience 221:1-11
Snyder, Adam C; Fiebelkorn, Ian C; Foxe, John J (2012) Pitting binding against selection--electrophysiological measures of feature-based attention are attenuated by Gestalt object grouping. Eur J Neurosci 35:960-7
Altschuler, Ted S; Molholm, Sophie; Russo, Natalie N et al. (2012) Early electrophysiological indices of illusory contour processing within the lateral occipital complex are virtually impervious to manipulations of illusion strength. Neuroimage 59:4074-85
Foxe, John J; Yeap, Sherlyn; Snyder, Adam C et al. (2011) The N1 auditory evoked potential component as an endophenotype for schizophrenia: high-density electrical mapping in clinically unaffected first-degree relatives, first-episode, and chronic schizophrenia patients. Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci 261:331-9
Fiebelkorn, Ian C; Foxe, John J; Butler, John S et al. (2011) Ready, set, reset: stimulus-locked periodicity in behavioral performance demonstrates the consequences of cross-sensory phase reset. J Neurosci 31:9971-81
Krakowski, Aaron I; Ross, Lars A; Snyder, Adam C et al. (2011) The neurophysiology of human biological motion processing: a high-density electrical mapping study. Neuroimage 56:373-83
Banerjee, Snigdha; Snyder, Adam C; Molholm, Sophie et al. (2011) Oscillatory alpha-band mechanisms and the deployment of spatial attention to anticipated auditory and visual target locations: supramodal or sensory-specific control mechanisms? J Neurosci 31:9923-32

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