Abstract
Paying attention to a stimulus selectively increases the ability to process it. For example, when subjects attend to a specific region of a visual scene, their sensitivity to changes at that location increases. A large number of studies describe the behavioural consequences and neurophysiological correlates of attending to spatial locations1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. There has, in contrast, been little study of the allocation of attention over time9,10. Because subjects can anticipate predictable events with great temporal precision11,12,13,14,15, it seems probable that they might dynamically shift their attention when performing a familiar perceptual task whose constraints changed over time. We trained monkeys to respond to a stimulus change where the probability of occurrence changed over time. Recording from area V4 of the visual cortex in these animals, we found that the modulation of neuronal responses changed according to the probability of the change occurring at that instant. Thus, we show that the attentional modulation of sensory neurons reflects a subject's anticipation of the timing of behaviourally relevant events.
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grants from the National Eye Institute and the Human Frontier Science Program. J.H.R.M. is an Investigator with the Howard Hughes Medical Institute. We thank D. Murray and T. Williford for assistance with the animals, and W. Bosking, E. Cook, R. A. Eatock, M. Shadlen, D. Sparks, T. Yang and T. Williford for comments on the manuscript.
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Ghose, G., Maunsell, J. Attentional modulation in visual cortex depends on task timing. Nature 419, 616–620 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01057
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nature01057
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