Early involvement of temporal area in attentional selection of grating orientation: an ERP study
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2002
Abstract:
The aim of the present study was to investigate the neural mechanisms of
stimulus orientation selection in humans by recording event-related
potentials (ERPs) of the brain with a 32-channel montage. Stimuli were
isoluminant black-and-white gratings (3 cpd) having an orientation of 50,
70, 90, 110 and 130, randomly presented in the foveal portion (2 of visual
angle) of the central visual field. The task consisted in selectively
attending and responding to one of the five grating orientations, while
ignoring the others. ERP results showed that orientation selection
affected neural processing starting already at an early post-stimulus
latency. The P1 component (80-140 ms) measured at temporal area, which
might well be reflecting the activity of the ventral stream (i.e. 'WHAT'
system) of the visual pathways, showed an enhanced amplitude for target
orientations. These effects increased with progressive neural processing
over time as reflected by selection negativity (SN) and P300 components.
In addition, both reaction times (RTs) and ERPs showed a strong 'oblique'
effect, very probably reflecting the perceptual predominance of orthogonal
versus oblique stimulus orientation in the human visual system: RTs were
much faster, and SN and P300 components much larger, to gratings presented
vertically than in other orientations.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Zani, Alberto
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