AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers recorded local field potentials in cats to study how different brain areas respond during visual and auditory attention tasks.
  • They found that during visual tasks, there was an increase in beta activity (12-25 Hz) specifically in the lateral posterior-pulvinar complex and certain visual cortical areas, indicating a link to successful visual attention.
  • The study identified two subregions within the lateral zone of the LP-P that had different frequencies of beta activity (low and high), suggesting that there are separate corticothalamic systems coordinating visual attention through distinct beta activity patterns.

Article Abstract

Local field potentials from different visual cortical areas and subdivisions of the cat's lateral posterior-pulvinar complex of the thalamus (LP-P) were recorded during a behavioral task based on delayed spatial discrimination of visual or auditory stimuli. During visual but not auditory attentive tasks, we observed an increase of beta activity (12-25 Hz) as calculated from signals recorded from the caudal part of the lateral zone of the LP-P (LPl-c) as well as from cortical areas 17 and 18 and the complex located at the middle suprasylvian sulcus (MSS). This beta activity appeared only in the trials that ended with a successful response, proving its relationship to the mechanism of visual attention. In contrast, no enhanced beta activity was observed in the rostral part of the lateral zone of the LP-P and in the pulvinar proper. Two subregions of LPl-c (ventromedial and dorsolateral) were distinguished by visually related, attentional beta activity of low (12-18 Hz) and high (18-25 Hz) frequencies, respectively. At the same time, area 17 exhibited attentional activation in the whole beta range, and an increase of power in low-frequency beta was observed in the medial bank of MSS, whereas cortical area 18 and the lateral bank of the MSS were activated in the high beta range. Phase-correlation analysis revealed that two distinct corticothalamic systems were synchronized by the beta activity of different frequencies. One comprised of cortical area 17, ventromedial region of LPl-c, and medial MSS, the second involved area 18 and the dorsolateral LPl-c. Our observations suggest that LPl-c belongs to the wide corticothalamic attentional system, which is functionally segregated by distinct streams of beta activity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6673477PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4004-06.2007DOI Listing

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