The control of visuo-spatial attention entails the joint contribution of goal-directed (endogenous) and stimulus-driven (exogenous) factors. However, little is known about the neural bases of the interplay between these two mechanisms. To address this issue, we presented endogenous (spatially informative) and exogenous (noninformative) visual cues sequentially within the same trial (double-cue paradigm) during fMRI, crossing factorially the validity of the two cues. We found that both endogenous and exogenous cues affected behavioral performance, speeding-up or slowing-down target discrimination when valid and invalid, respectively. Despite the double-cue paradigm maximizes the interplay between endogenous and exogenous factors, the two typ...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we asked participants to perform a visual target detect...
Despite behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for dissociations between endogenous (volunta...
In everyday life, the allocation of spatial attention typically entails the interplay between volunt...
In everyday life, the allocation of spatial attention typically entails the interplay between volunt...
Parietal brain regions have been implicated in reorienting of visuospatial attention in location-cue...
We used event-related fMRI to investigate the functional neuroanatomy of different processes in dire...
Event-related fMRI was used to examine the neural basis of endogenous (top-down) and exogenous (bott...
Voluntary orienting of visual attention is conventionally measured in tasks with predictive central ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the neural correlates of the functional distinction underly...
Orienting of spatial attention is a family of phylogenetically old mechanisms developed to select in...
Neuroimaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies have implicated a dorsal fronto-par...
Attentional orientation to a spatial cue and reorientation-after invalid cueing-are mediated by two ...
Selection and reorienting are two fundamental aspects of spatial attention. By means of event-relate...
The control of visuospatial attention entails multiple processes, including both voluntary (endogeno...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we asked participants to perform a visual target detect...
Despite behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for dissociations between endogenous (volunta...
In everyday life, the allocation of spatial attention typically entails the interplay between volunt...
In everyday life, the allocation of spatial attention typically entails the interplay between volunt...
Parietal brain regions have been implicated in reorienting of visuospatial attention in location-cue...
We used event-related fMRI to investigate the functional neuroanatomy of different processes in dire...
Event-related fMRI was used to examine the neural basis of endogenous (top-down) and exogenous (bott...
Voluntary orienting of visual attention is conventionally measured in tasks with predictive central ...
The aim of this study was to investigate the neural correlates of the functional distinction underly...
Orienting of spatial attention is a family of phylogenetically old mechanisms developed to select in...
Neuroimaging and transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) studies have implicated a dorsal fronto-par...
Attentional orientation to a spatial cue and reorientation-after invalid cueing-are mediated by two ...
Selection and reorienting are two fundamental aspects of spatial attention. By means of event-relate...
The control of visuospatial attention entails multiple processes, including both voluntary (endogeno...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
Using functional magnetic resonance imaging, we asked participants to perform a visual target detect...
Despite behavioral and electrophysiological evidence for dissociations between endogenous (volunta...