Neurological organization and attention
Most experiments
show that one neural correlate of attention is enhanced firing. In a 2007
review, Knudsen describes a more general model which identifies four core
processes of attention, with working memory at the center:
·
Working
memory temporarily stores information for detailed analysis.
·
Competitive
selection is the process that determines which information gains access to
working memory.
·
Through
top-down sensitivity control, higher cognitive processes can regulate signal
intensity in information channels that compete for access to working memory,
and thus give them an advantage in the process of competitive selection.
Through top-down sensitivity control, the momentary content of working memory
can influence the selection of new information, and thus mediate voluntary
control of attention in a recurrent loop (endogenous attention).
·
Bottom-up
saliency filters automatically enhance the response to infrequent stimuli, or
stimuli of instinctive or learned biological relevance (exogenous attention).
Neutrally, at
different hierarchical levels spatial maps can enhance or inhibit activity in
sensory areas, and induce orienting behaviors like eye movement.
·
At
the top of the hierarchy, the frontal eye fields (FEF) on the dorsolateral
frontal cortex contain a retinocentric spatial map. Microstimulation in the FEF
induces monkeys to make a saccade to the relevant location. Stimulation at
levels too low to induce a saccade will nonetheless enhance cortical responses
to stimuli located in the relevant area.
·
At
the next lower level, a variety of spatial maps are found in the parietal
cortex. In particular, the lateral intraparietal area (LIP) contains a saliency
map and is interconnected both with the FEF and with sensory areas.
·
Certain
automatic responses that influence attention, like orienting to a highly
salient stimulus, are mediated subcortically by the superior colliculi.
·
At
the neural network level, it is thought that processes like lateral inhibition
mediate the process of competitive selection.
In many cases
attention produces changes in the EEG. Many animals, including humans, produce
gamma waves (40–60 Hz) when focusing attention on a particular object or
activity.
Another commonly
used model for the attention system has been put forth by researchers such as
Michael Posner divides attention into three functional components: alerting,
orienting, and executive attention.
·
Alerting
is the process involved in becoming and staying attentive toward the
surroundings. It appears to exist in the frontal and parietal lobes of the
right hemisphere, and is modulated by norepinephrine.
·
Orienting
is the directing of attention to a specific stimulus.
·
Executive
attention is used when there is a conflict between multiple attention cues. It
is essentially the same as the central executive in Baddeley's model of working
memory. The Eriksen flanker task has shown that the executive control of
attention may take place in the anterior cingulate cortex.
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