Top-down attention mechanisms require the selection of specificobjects or locations;however,the brain mechanism involved when attention is allocated across different modalities is not well understood.The aim of this s...Top-down attention mechanisms require the selection of specificobjects or locations;however,the brain mechanism involved when attention is allocated across different modalities is not well understood.The aim of this study was to use functional magnetic resonance imaging to define the neural mechanisms underlyingdivided and selective spatial attention.A concurrent audiovisual stimulus was used,and subjects were prompted to focus on a visual,auditory and audiovisual stimulus in a Posner paradigm.Ourbehavioral results confirmed the better performance of selectiveattention compared to devided attention.We found differences in the activation level of the frontoparietal network,visual/auditorycortex,the putamen and the salience network under differentattention conditions.We further used Granger causality(GC)toexplore effective connectivity differences between tasks.Differences in GC connectivity between visual and auditory selective tasksreflected the visual dominance effect under spatial attention.In addition,our results supported the role of the putamen inredistributing attention and the functional separation of the saliencenetwork.In summary,we explored the audiovisual top-down allocation of attention and observed the differences in neuralmechanisms under endogenous attention modes,which revealedthe differences in cross-modal expression in visual and auditory attention under attentional modulation.展开更多
基金The study was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(Grant Nos.62171300,61727807).
文摘Top-down attention mechanisms require the selection of specificobjects or locations;however,the brain mechanism involved when attention is allocated across different modalities is not well understood.The aim of this study was to use functional magnetic resonance imaging to define the neural mechanisms underlyingdivided and selective spatial attention.A concurrent audiovisual stimulus was used,and subjects were prompted to focus on a visual,auditory and audiovisual stimulus in a Posner paradigm.Ourbehavioral results confirmed the better performance of selectiveattention compared to devided attention.We found differences in the activation level of the frontoparietal network,visual/auditorycortex,the putamen and the salience network under differentattention conditions.We further used Granger causality(GC)toexplore effective connectivity differences between tasks.Differences in GC connectivity between visual and auditory selective tasksreflected the visual dominance effect under spatial attention.In addition,our results supported the role of the putamen inredistributing attention and the functional separation of the saliencenetwork.In summary,we explored the audiovisual top-down allocation of attention and observed the differences in neuralmechanisms under endogenous attention modes,which revealedthe differences in cross-modal expression in visual and auditory attention under attentional modulation.