AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how directing attention to specific motion features enhances performance in detecting point-light biological motion within noise.
  • The researchers used steady-state visual-evoked potentials (SSVEP) to measure attention effects on motion direction in an unattended area of the visual field.
  • Results indicated that heightened SSVEP activity, particularly from the posterior parietal cortex, occurred when the direction of the unattended motion contrasted with that of the detected walker, demonstrating how brain connectivity can aid in processing visual information.

Article Abstract

Performance in detection tasks can be improved by directing attention to task-relevant features. In this study, we evaluate the direction tuning of selective attention to motion features when observers detect point-light biological motion in noise. Feature-based attention strategy is assessed by capitalizing on the sensitivity of unattended steady-state visual-evoked potential (SSVEP) to the spreading of feature-based attention to unattended regions of space. Participants monitored for the presence of a point-light walker embedded in uniform dynamic noise in the center of the screen. We analyzed the phase-locked electroencephalogram response to a flickering random-dot kinematogram (RDK) in an unattended peripheral annulus for the 1 s prior to the onset of the target. We found the highest SSVEP power to originate from electrodes over posterior parietal cortex (PPC), with power modulated by the direction of motion in the unattended annulus. The SSVEP was strongest on trials in which the unattended motion was opposite the facing direction of the walker, consistent with the backstroke of the feet and with the global direction of perceived background motion from a translating walker. Coherence between electrodes over PPC and other brain regions successfully predicted individual participant's d-prime, with the highest regression coefficients at electrodes over ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (VLPFC). The findings are evidence that functional connectivity between frontal and parietal cortex promote perceptual feature-based attention, and subsequent perceptual sensitivity, when segregating point-light figures from masking surround.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1167/17.9.22DOI Listing

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