Selective attention allows us to prioritize the processing of relevant information and filter out irrelevant information. Human functional neuroimaging and lesion-based studies have highlighted the fronto-parietal dorsal attention network (DAN) as an important network in this process. In this study, we investigated the role of the DAN in distracter suppression by dynamically modifying the priority of visual information (target > high priority distracter > low priority distracter) based on features only. To this end, we collected fMRI data in 24 healthy subjects, who performed a feature-based variant of the sustained attention to response task. Participants had to select one or attend two stream(s) of overlapping digits that differed in colo...
How do we ignore stimuli that are salient but irrelevant when our task is to select a lower salient ...
International audienceDetection of unexpected, yet relevant events is essential in daily life. fMRI ...
Our visual system is constantly exposed to vast amounts of information. A selection process is there...
Lesion and functional brain imaging studies have suggested that there are two anatomically nonoverla...
The top-down control of attention involves command signals arising chiefly in the dorsal attention n...
While numerous previous studies investigated how feature-based attention modulates mean neural activ...
Experimental neurophysiology and functional neuroimaging have identified a dorsal attention network ...
In visual search, the presence of a salient, yet task-irrelevant, distractor in the stimulus array i...
Functional imaging studies have identified a dorsal fronto-parietal network whose activity reflects ...
In everyday life, we are continuously struggling at focusing on our current goals while at the same ...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
International audienceTo enable unexpected shifts of covert visual spatial attention, a ventral atte...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
Humans can voluntarily attend to a variety of visual attributes to serve behavioral goals. Voluntary...
How do we ignore stimuli that are salient but irrelevant when our task is to select a lower salient ...
International audienceDetection of unexpected, yet relevant events is essential in daily life. fMRI ...
Our visual system is constantly exposed to vast amounts of information. A selection process is there...
Lesion and functional brain imaging studies have suggested that there are two anatomically nonoverla...
The top-down control of attention involves command signals arising chiefly in the dorsal attention n...
While numerous previous studies investigated how feature-based attention modulates mean neural activ...
Experimental neurophysiology and functional neuroimaging have identified a dorsal attention network ...
In visual search, the presence of a salient, yet task-irrelevant, distractor in the stimulus array i...
Functional imaging studies have identified a dorsal fronto-parietal network whose activity reflects ...
In everyday life, we are continuously struggling at focusing on our current goals while at the same ...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
International audienceTo enable unexpected shifts of covert visual spatial attention, a ventral atte...
A central question in the study of selective attention is whether top-down attentional control mecha...
Humans can voluntarily attend to a variety of visual attributes to serve behavioral goals. Voluntary...
How do we ignore stimuli that are salient but irrelevant when our task is to select a lower salient ...
International audienceDetection of unexpected, yet relevant events is essential in daily life. fMRI ...
Our visual system is constantly exposed to vast amounts of information. A selection process is there...