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Neural basis of visuospatial attention investigated by modulation of brain activity with transcranial magnetic stimulation

Applicant Dr. Paul Taylor
Subject Area General, Cognitive and Mathematical Psychology
Term from 2014 to 2017
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 257610869
 
Final Report Year 2018

Final Report Abstract

Attentional selection is the process by which behaviourally relevant information is selected for further processing in the control of action. Correlational approaches such as imaging techniques have shown that a variety of neural processes co-vary with attentional parameters. But an important part of the puzzle remains: which of these physiological changes play a causal role in which (if any) aspects of attentional selection? To explore this issue we used brain stimulation techniques during attentional selection tasks. Results from this project show a causal role of neural regions in orchestrating which information should be prioritised to guide behaviour. This was demonstrated by applying transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to cortical areas during performance of a classic and robust attentional task, and measuring the behavioural consequences. We argued in this project that to go more deeply into understanding attention, and in studying it further with brain stimulation methods, requires developments in recording ongoing brain activity and in pioneering new tools for measuring cognition despite the limitations imposed by use of these interference measures. Careful development of tasks, and recording brain activity especially with EEG, can demonstrate the extent to which the effects of brain stimulation mimic those occurring during normal cognition (i.e. without stimulation). In this way we were able to use brain stimulation in the form of occipital TMS pulses as a measure of ongoing cortical excitability and accordingly to compare how attentional selection operates as a function of low or high spontaneous excitability. This project also supports the view of attention as being modulated by excitability in the visual cortex. Furthermore by incorporating other methods of brain stimulation future studies can overcome some of the limitations of TMS such as the necessary time constraints.

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