The lateral intraparietal sulcus takes viewpoint changes into account during memory-guided attention in natural scenes

被引:0
作者
Ilenia Salsano
Valerio Santangelo
Emiliano Macaluso
机构
[1] IRCCS Santa Lucia Foundation,Neuroimaging Laboratory
[2] Sapienza University of Rome,PhD Program in Behavioral Neuroscience
[3] University of Perugia,Department of Philosophy, Social Sciences and Education
[4] Lyon Neuroscience Research Center,ImpAct Team
来源
Brain Structure and Function | 2021年 / 226卷
关键词
fMRI; Attention; Long-term memory; Intraparietal sulcus; Natural scenes; Visual search;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Previous studies demonstrated that long-term memory related to object-position in natural scenes guides visuo-spatial attention during subsequent search. Memory-guided attention has been associated with the activation of memory regions (the medial-temporal cortex) and with the fronto-parietal attention network. Notably, these circuits represent external locations with different frames of reference: egocentric (i.e., eyes/head-centered) in the dorsal attention network vs. allocentric (i.e., world/scene-centered) in the medial temporal cortex. Here we used behavioral measures and fMRI to assess the contribution of egocentric and allocentric spatial information during memory-guided attention. At encoding, participants were presented with real-world scenes and asked to search for and memorize the location of a high-contrast target superimposed in half of the scenes. At retrieval, participants viewed again the same scenes, now all including a low-contrast target. In scenes that included the target at encoding, the target was presented at the same scene-location. Critically, scenes were now shown either from the same or different viewpoint compared with encoding. This resulted in a memory-by-view design (target seen/unseen x same/different view), which allowed us teasing apart the role of allocentric vs. egocentric signals during memory-guided attention. Retrieval-related results showed greater search-accuracy for seen than unseen targets, both in the same and different views, indicating that memory contributes to visual search notwithstanding perspective changes. This view-change independent effect was associated with the activation of the left lateral intra-parietal sulcus. Our results demonstrate that this parietal region mediates memory-guided attention by taking into account allocentric/scene-centered information about the objects' position in the external world.
引用
收藏
页码:989 / 1006
页数:17
相关论文
共 191 条
[21]  
Grady CL(2005)Learning places from views: variation in scene processing as a function of experience and navigational ability J Cogn Neurosci 27 6141-6149
[22]  
Moscovitch M(2007)Visual scene processing in familiar and unfamiliar environments J Neurophysiol 20 1504-1513
[23]  
Corbetta M(2007)Where am i now? Distinct roles for parahippocampal and retrosplenial cortices in place recognition J Neurosci 19 2946-2958
[24]  
Shulman GL(2017)The cognitive map in humans: spatial navigation and beyond Nat Neurosci 382 626-628
[25]  
Corbetta M(2009)The brain network underlying serial visual search: comparing overt and covert spatial orienting, for activations and for effective connectivity Cereb Cortex 16 465-483
[26]  
Shulman GL(1996)Where in the brain does visual attention select the forest and the trees? Nature 206 109-120
[27]  
Miezin FM(2002)Classical and Bayesian inference in neuroimaging: theory NeuroImage 19 534-543
[28]  
Petersen SE(2010)Multiple reference frames used by the human brain for spatial perception and memory Exp Brain Res 34 15497-15504
[29]  
Corbetta M(2015)A parietal memory network revealed by multiple MRI methods Trends Cogn Sci 23 947-957
[30]  
Akbudak E(2014)Attention, reward, and information seeking J Neurosci 37 3779-3794