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Is that a belt or a snake? object attentional selection affects the early stages of visual sensory processing

DOI: 10.1186/1744-9081-8-6

Keywords: ERPs, C1, P1, N1, visual selective attention, visual striate cortex, V1, space and object parallel processing, shape processing time course, shape categorization

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Abstract:

In this study object- and space-based attention mechanisms were conjointly investigated by presenting complex, familiar shapes of artefacts and animals, intermixed with distracters, in different tasks requiring the selection of a relevant target-category within a relevant spatial location, while ignoring the other shape categories within this location, and, overall, all the categories at an irrelevant location. EEG was recorded from 30 scalp electrode sites in 21 right-handed participants.ERP findings showed that visual processing was modulated by both shape- and location-relevance per se, beginning separately at the latency of the early phase of a precocious negativity (60-80 ms) at mesial scalp sites consistent with the C1 component, and a positivity at more lateral sites. The data also showed that the attentional modulation progressed conjointly at the latency of the subsequent P1 (100-120 ms) and N1 (120-180 ms), as well as later-latency components. These findings support the views that (1) V1 may be precociously modulated by direct top-down influences, and participates to object, besides simple features, attentional selection; (2) object spatial and non-spatial features selection might begin with an early, parallel detection of a target object in the visual field, followed by the progressive focusing of spatial attention onto the location of an actual target for its identification, somehow in line with neural mechanisms reported in the literature as "object-based space selection", or with those proposed for visual search.In the literature on neural mechanisms underlying visual selective attention, the theoretical view that attention is indeed unable to modulate V1 activity is so generally acknowledged to be reported in available cognitive neuroscience handbooks. Several influential studies have contributed to this view. For example, Martinez et al. [1] reported no attentive modulation for the early C1 component, originating in the striate cortex, in a combined

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