Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention

Our senses, while limited, shape our perception of the world and contribute to the functional architecture of the brain. This dissertation investigates the role of sensory modality and task demands in the cortical organization of healthy human adults using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMR...

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Main Author: Michalka, Samantha
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14395
id ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-14395
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-143952019-01-08T15:36:41Z Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention Michalka, Samantha Neurosciences Attention Cognition Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) Resting state Sensory modality Short-term memory Our senses, while limited, shape our perception of the world and contribute to the functional architecture of the brain. This dissertation investigates the role of sensory modality and task demands in the cortical organization of healthy human adults using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). This research provides evidence for sensory modality bias in frontal cortical regions by directly contrasting auditory and visual sustained attention. This contrast revealed two distinct visual-biased regions in lateral frontal cortex - superior and inferior precentral sulcus (sPCS, iPCS) - anatomically interleaved with two auditory-biased regions - transverse gyrus intersecting precentral sulcus (tgPCS) and caudal inferior frontal sulcus (cIFS). Intrinsic (resting-state) functional connectivity analysis demonstrated that sPCS and iPCS fall within a broad visual-attention network, while tgPCS and cIFS fall within a broad auditory-attention network. Unisensory (auditory or visual) short-term memory (STM) tasks assessed the flexible recruitment of these sensory-biased cortical regions by varying information domain demands (e.g., spatial, temporal). While both modalities provide spatial and temporal information, vision has greater spatial resolution than audition, and audition has excellent temporal precision relative to vision. A visual temporal, but not a spatial, STM task flexibly recruited frontal auditory-biased regions; conversely, an auditory spatial task more strongly recruited frontal visual-biased regions compared to an auditory temporal task. This flexible recruitment extended to an auditory-biased superior temporal lobe region and to a subset of visual-biased parietal regions. A demanding auditory spatial STM task recruited anterior/superior visuotopic maps (IPS2-4, SPL1) along the intraparietal sulcus, but neither spatial nor temporal auditory tasks recruited posterior/interior maps. Finally, a comparison of visual spatial attention and STM under varied cognitive load demands attempted to further elucidate the organization of posterior parietal cortex. Parietal visuotopic maps were recruited for both visual spatial attention and working memory but demonstrated a graded response to task demands. Posterior/inferior maps (IPS0-1) demonstrated a linear relationship with the number of items attended to or remembered in the visual spatial tasks. Anterior/superior maps (IPS2-4, SPL1) demonstrated a general recruitment in visual spatial cognitive tasks, with a stronger response for visual spatial attention compared to STM. 2016-02-12T14:31:06Z 2016-02-12T14:31:06Z 2014 2016-01-22T18:56:47Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14395 en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Neurosciences
Attention
Cognition
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
Resting state
Sensory modality
Short-term memory
spellingShingle Neurosciences
Attention
Cognition
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
Resting state
Sensory modality
Short-term memory
Michalka, Samantha
Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
description Our senses, while limited, shape our perception of the world and contribute to the functional architecture of the brain. This dissertation investigates the role of sensory modality and task demands in the cortical organization of healthy human adults using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). This research provides evidence for sensory modality bias in frontal cortical regions by directly contrasting auditory and visual sustained attention. This contrast revealed two distinct visual-biased regions in lateral frontal cortex - superior and inferior precentral sulcus (sPCS, iPCS) - anatomically interleaved with two auditory-biased regions - transverse gyrus intersecting precentral sulcus (tgPCS) and caudal inferior frontal sulcus (cIFS). Intrinsic (resting-state) functional connectivity analysis demonstrated that sPCS and iPCS fall within a broad visual-attention network, while tgPCS and cIFS fall within a broad auditory-attention network. Unisensory (auditory or visual) short-term memory (STM) tasks assessed the flexible recruitment of these sensory-biased cortical regions by varying information domain demands (e.g., spatial, temporal). While both modalities provide spatial and temporal information, vision has greater spatial resolution than audition, and audition has excellent temporal precision relative to vision. A visual temporal, but not a spatial, STM task flexibly recruited frontal auditory-biased regions; conversely, an auditory spatial task more strongly recruited frontal visual-biased regions compared to an auditory temporal task. This flexible recruitment extended to an auditory-biased superior temporal lobe region and to a subset of visual-biased parietal regions. A demanding auditory spatial STM task recruited anterior/superior visuotopic maps (IPS2-4, SPL1) along the intraparietal sulcus, but neither spatial nor temporal auditory tasks recruited posterior/interior maps. Finally, a comparison of visual spatial attention and STM under varied cognitive load demands attempted to further elucidate the organization of posterior parietal cortex. Parietal visuotopic maps were recruited for both visual spatial attention and working memory but demonstrated a graded response to task demands. Posterior/inferior maps (IPS0-1) demonstrated a linear relationship with the number of items attended to or remembered in the visual spatial tasks. Anterior/superior maps (IPS2-4, SPL1) demonstrated a general recruitment in visual spatial cognitive tasks, with a stronger response for visual spatial attention compared to STM.
author Michalka, Samantha
author_facet Michalka, Samantha
author_sort Michalka, Samantha
title Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
title_short Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
title_full Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
title_fullStr Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
title_full_unstemmed Flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
title_sort flexible recruitment of cortical networks in visual and auditory attention
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/14395
work_keys_str_mv AT michalkasamantha flexiblerecruitmentofcorticalnetworksinvisualandauditoryattention
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