A lateralized alpha-band marker of the interference of exogenous attention over endogenous attention

Author:

Landry Mathieu12ORCID,da Silva Castanheira Jason3,Raz Amir4,Baillet Sylvain3,Sackur Jérôme125

Affiliation:

1. Laboratoire de Sciences Cognitives et Psycholinguistique , ENS, , Paris 75005 , France

2. PSL University, EHESS, CNRS , ENS, , Paris 75005 , France

3. Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University , Montreal, Qc, H3A 2B4 , Canada

4. Institute for Interdisciplinary Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Chapman University , Irvine, CA, 92618 , USA

5. École Polytechnique , Palaiseau 91120 , France

Abstract

Abstract   Current theories of attention differentiate exogenous from endogenous orienting of visuospatial attention. While both forms of attention orienting engage different functional systems, endogenous and exogenous attention are thought to share resources, as shown by empirical evidence of their functional interactions. The present study aims to uncover the neurobiological basis of how salient events that drive exogenous attention disrupts endogenous attention processes. We hypothesize that interference from exogenous attention over endogenous attention involves alpha-band activity, a neural marker of visuospatial attention. To test this hypothesis, we contrast the effects of endogenous attention across two experimental tasks while we recorded electroencephalography (n = 32, both sexes): a single cueing task where endogenous attention is engaged in isolation, and a double cueing task where endogenous attention is concurrently engaged with exogenous attention. Our results confirm that the concurrent engagement of exogenous attention interferes with endogenous attention processes. We also found that changes in alpha-band activity mediate the relationship between endogenous attention and its effect on task performance, and that the interference of exogenous attention on endogenous attention occurs via the moderation of this indirect effect. Altogether, our results substantiate a model of attention, whereby endogenous and exogenous attentional processes involve the same neurophysiological resources. Significance Statement Scientists differentiate top-down from bottom-up visuospatial attention processes. While bottom-up attention is rapidly engaged by emerging demands from the environment, top-down attention in contrast reflects slow voluntary shifts of spatial attention. Several lines of research substantiate the idea that top-down and bottom-up attentional processes involve distinct functional systems. An increasing number of studies, however, argue that both attention systems share brain processing resources. The current study examines how salient visual events that engage bottom-up processes interfere with top-down attentional processes. Using neurophysiological recordings and multivariate pattern classification techniques, the authors show that these patterns of interference occur within the alpha-band of neural activity (8–12 Hz), which implies that bottom-up and top-down attention processes share this narrow-band frequency brain resource. The results further demonstrate that patterns of alpha-band activity explains, in part, the interference between top-down and bottom-up attention at the behavioral level.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

CIHR Canada research Chair in Neural Dynamics of Brain Systems

Agency of Natural Resources

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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