Authors
Iole Indovina, Emiliano Macaluso
Publication date
2007/7/1
Journal
Cerebral Cortex
Volume
17
Issue
7
Pages
1701-1711
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
The control of visuospatial attention entails multiple processes, including both voluntary (endogenous) factors and stimulus-driven (exogenous) factors. Exogenous processes can be triggered by visual targets presented at a previously unattended location, thus capturing attention in a stimulus-driven manner. However, little is known about the relative role of stimulus salience and behavioral relevance for this type of spatial reorienting. Here, we directly assessed how salience and relevance affect activation of the frontoparietal attentional system, using either low-salience but task-relevant target stimuli or salient but task-irrelevant flickering checkerboards. We compared event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging responses for stimuli presented at the unattended versus attended side (invalid minus valid trials), separately for the 2 categories of visual stimuli. We found that task-relevant invalid targets …
Total citations
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