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Attention and neglect
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Neurophysiology of Attention
The Superior Colliculus MT, MST and PPC V2, V4 and IT
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Neurophysiology of Attention
The Superior Colliculus MT, MST and PPC V2, V4 and IT
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The Superior Colliculus
Receptive Field
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The Superior Colliculus
Receptive Field Saccadic Enhancement
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The Superior Colliculus
Receptive Field
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Is the saccadic enhancement in the superior colliculus due to attention or to a motor intent?
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The Superior Colliculus
Receptive Field Attention alone can increase the firing rate
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Receptive Field
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Response enhancement could correspond to the selection of the attended target
This enhancement seems to be independent of the behavior
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Physiology of Attention
The Superior Colliculus MT, MST and PPC (the posterior parietal cortex) V4 and IT (the infero temporal cortex)
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Treue and Maunsell, MST
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Response to the attended stimulus is enhanced
Enhancement is stronger when the distractor and the target are in the same receptive field The response to the distractor is decreased
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PPC: Gottlieb and Goldberg, 1998
Cue: Triangle * 1st Saccade 2nd Saccade Firing Rate Cue + Time Cue: Circle * + 2nd Saccade Firing Rate 1st Saccade Time
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Cells in MT and PPC: Attention boosts the gain of the response to the attended stimulus while reducing the response to the unattended stimulus.
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Physiology of Attention
The Superior Colliculus MT and PPC (the posterior parietal cortex) V2, V4 and IT
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Reynolds et al, 1999 Monkey attends preferred stimulus of the cell
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Reynolds et al, 1999 Monkey attends null stimulus for the cell
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McAdams and Maunsell, 1999 Colored Gaussian
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McAdams and Maunsell, 1999
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McAdams and Maunsell, 1999
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What’s going on? Maunsell: Desimone: Gain modulation No baseline shift
Seen everywhere although strongest when the distractor and the target are in the same receptive field Desimone: Not gain: normalization Baseline shift Seen only when the distractor and the target are in the same receptive field
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Neglect
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Line Cancellation
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Line Bisection
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Patient: Frederico Fellini
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Patients: Right Parietal Task: Shape Identification
Karnath et al., 1993 Patients: Right Parietal Task: Shape Identification Condition Condition 2
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Retinocentric Neglect
Right Target Left Target % Correct Prediction for Retinocentric Neglect Condition Condition2
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Trunk-centered Neglect
Right Target Left Target % Correct Prediction for Trunk-centered Neglect Condition Condition2
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Patients % Correct % Correct Patient 1 Patient 2 C C2 C C2
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Frames of reference for neglect:
Trunk-centered?
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Left hand is still neglected even though it is now on the right
Left hand is neglected
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Can neglect be object-centered?
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Object-centered or relative neglect?
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Object-centered or relative neglect?
Draw the white half Draw the black half
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Driver et al, Neuropsychologia, 1994
Axis-centered neglect Main axis Hard Easy Driver et al, Neuropsychologia, 1994
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Frames of Reference of Neglect
Neglect always affects a mixture of egocentric frames of reference for all behaviors Neglect is always relative In some patients, it can also be axis-centered (object-centered).
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Can we relate the behavior of hemineglect patients to the response of neurons involved in spatial representations? What do we know of the response properties of neurons involved in spatial representations?
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Retinal Location (deg)
Eye Position ex = -20 ex = 0 ex = 20 Activity – Retinal Location (deg) (Andersen et al., 1985)
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Motor commands, M, are non linear functions of sensory inputs, S, and posture signals, P:
M = f(S,P) Such functions can be approximated by linear combinations of basis functions, Bi(S,P): M = S ci Bi(S,P) Claim: parietal neurons compute basis functions
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Retinal Location (deg)
Activity Retinal Location (deg) Eye Position (deg) Eye Position ex = -20 ex = 0 ex = 20 Activity – Retinal Location (deg)
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Eye Movements Reaching Premotor Cortex Head-Centered Map
Superior Colliculus Retinotopic Map Eye Movements Reaching Eye Position Basis Function Layer (Parietal Cortex) Retinal Location Eye Position Units Retinotopic Map Visual Cortex
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Can we generalize the basis function theory of spatial representations to object-centered representations?
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Neuronal Activity Trials Left of the object Right of the object
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Saccades Direction (deg)
Left of the object Right of the object Saccades Direction (deg) Neuronal Activity Activity Trials
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Explicit object-centered neurons or gain modulated neurons?
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Saccades Direction (deg)
Left of the object Right of the object Saccades Direction (deg) Neuronal Activity Activity Trials
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It appears that the parietal cortex uses basis functions for spatial representations in:
Egocentric coordinates (eye-, head-, body-centered) Object-centered coordinates
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Eye Movements Reaching Premotor Cortex Head-Centered Map
Superior Colliculus Retinotopic Map Eye Movements Reaching Eye Position Basis Function Layer (Parietal Cortex) Retinal Location Eye Position Units Retinotopic Map Visual Cortex
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Left Retinal Position Right Left Retinal Position Right
Premotor Cortex Head-Centered Map Superior Colliculus Retinotopic Map Right Right Basis Function Layer Eye Position Eye Position Left Retinal Position Right Left Retinal Position Right Left Map Right Map Eye Position Units Retinotopic Map Visual Cortex
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Main assumptions of the hemineglect model:
Parietal neurons compute basis functions Basis function units are distributed across hemispheres according to contralateral gradients
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Left Retinal Position Right Left Retinal Position Right
Premotor Cortex Head-Centered Map Superior Colliculus Retinotopic Map Right Right Basis Function Layer Eye Position Eye Position Left Retinal Position Right Left Retinal Position Right Left Map Right Map Eye Position Units Retinotopic Map Visual Cortex
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Saliency: summed activity in the basis function layer
Right Eye Position Left Left Right Retinal Location
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Model Patients Error Error Error Error Patients Line Orientation
Line Length Line Length Error Error Patients Model Line Orientation Line Orientation
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Patients: Right Parietal Task: Shape Identification
Karnath et al., 1993 Patients: Right Parietal Task: Shape Identification Condition Condition 2
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Right Target Left Target Model Condition Condition 2
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Left Stimulus Right Stimulus C2 C1 Head Position Retinal Location
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Left hand is still neglected even though it is now on the right
Left hand is neglected
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General principle: any change of posture toward the ipsilesional side results in an improvement in performance (extreme case: vestibular recovery)
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Relative neglect
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Draw the black half Draw the white half
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Object-centered neglect
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Activity in the Basis Function Layer
Main axis Hard Easy
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Conclusions Parietal neurons compute basis functions of their inputs. As a result, they encode the location of objects in multiple frames of reference simultaneously A lesion of a basis function representation leads to a syndrome similar to hemineglect if the basis functions are distributed across hemispheres according to contralateral gradients This approach can be generalized to object-centered representations
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