Title: Chapter 49 Attention
1Chapter 49Attention
- Presented by Rahnia Parker
2Overview
- What is attention?
- Research correlating attention and sensory
perception - Neuronal organization
- Regulating alertness
3ATTENTION
- Because people cant carry out more than one
cognitive or perceptual task, we need attention
which can be defined as neural mechanisms that
enable the selection of stimuli, or tasks, that
are immediately relevant to behavior. - Focus on relationship between attention and
sensory perception (esp. vision)
4Types of attention
- Depends on how, when and what a person attends
to - Orientation of eyes, head, and/or body
- Covertly looking at something w/out orienting
- Exogenous stimulus driven from external events
- Endogenous internal goals vs. external
distractions - Spatial location of something in space
- Specific objects regardless of location
5STUDIES and what they find
- Spatial cues
- Fig. 49.1
- Symbolic cues most likely target location w/out
appearing - Peripheral cues visual stimuli at expected
target location - Flashed stimuli as peripheral are powerful attn
attractors
6Studies cont.
- Neglect Syndrome
- Brain lesions
- Behavior towards contralesional world
- What they see (fig. 49.2)
- Movement in contralesional space
- Not sensory or motor deficits failure to select
appropriate protions of a sensory representation.
7Studies cont.
- Control of spatial attn
- Studies showing pareital lobe, frontal lobe, and
anterior cingulate cortex vital - ERPs (event-related potentials) to measure the
human spatial attention network - ERP MRI or PET indirect measures of neural
activity
8Studies cont.
- Human frontal and pareital cortical areas are
sources for top-down biasing signals seen in
visual cortex - Functional brain imaging studies show the
following areas are actived in a variety of
visuospatial tasks requiring spatially directed
attn - SPL superior parietal lobule
- FEF frontal eye field
- SEF supplementary eye field
- These areas driven by both attentional feedback
signals and visual stimulus
9Studies cont
- MONKEY research
- Correlation between selective visual attn and
neural activity - Neuron sensitivity selective for stimuli
10Monkey research cont.
- Observations suggesting parietal cortex important
for shifting attn - FEF frontal eye field and saccade planning and
covert attentional selection. - Organization of spatial attn system might be
different in monkeys and humans
11Studies cont
- Attention increases sensitivity of vision
- How? Probably increasing neuronal responses
- Pt. C top shows w/out attn lots of overlap btwn
2 stimuli but bottom shows response with attention
12Studies cont.
- Attention affects neural activity in the human
visual cortex in the presence and absence of
visual stimuli - Event related potential (ERP) and brain imaging
studies shows selective attn can affect neural
processing of visual info in human visual cortex - Attn affects activity of neurons that code an
attended location and attended stimulus
attribute. - Selective attn modulates activity in extrastriate
areas of visual cortex - Neural activity affected in presence and absence
of sensory input
13Studies cont.
- What about in a whole world full of stimuli, how
does attn select relevant stimuli? - Wheres Waldo
Efficient and inefficient Bottom line Visual
system is limited
14Studies cont.
- What causes limitations?
- In complex visual situations (wheres Waldo) you
need to use attention which selects features from
one location at a time - Early and late stages of processing may cause
limitations - Neurons can only process some signals, not all
- Competition among potentially relevant stimuli
and biases that determine the outcome of the
competition - Attention helps select stimulus in ventral visual
processing stream and MT and MST of the dorsal
stream. - Nonspatial feedback might also bias the visual
system toward specific target object, not just
location.
15Studies cont.
- In human visual cortex mechanisms for
competition btwn multiple stimuli - Use fMRI to find out
- Certain visual systems activated but stimuli
presentation suppresses areas (esp. V4 and TEO)
16Studies cont.
- Target selection for eye movement
- Dual task of loci of attention and saccade
- Found that you could
- Give priority to saccade task
- Give priority to perceptual identification task
- Give equal priority to both tasks
17Alertness
- Level of alertness necessary for selective
attention - Maintenance from brainstem to cortical and
subcortical regions of the brain - ACh
- NE
- DA
- 5-HT
18Alertness cont.
- Monoamines act as neuromodulators
- NE-LC system (LC locus ceruleus in brain stem)
project neurons to thalamus, cerebral cortex and
cerebellum - Three types of task-related activity
- Spontaneous discharge
- Phasic stimulus-evoked responses
- Phasic responses related to physical orienting
toward given stimulus
19Key Points
- Attention allows us to select tasks that are
perceived from sensory perception - Much research is being done to study attention
and how it works - The pareital lobe, frontal lobe, and anterior
cingulate cortex are the areas of the brain
necessary in attention - Alertness is regulated by the brain stem and the
transmitters that it releases
20Chapter 50 - Basic mechanism of learning and
memory
- Associative learning
- Nonassociative learning
- LTP
- LTD
21Associative learning
- Classical conditioning
- Conditioned stimulus (CS)
- Unconditioned stimulus (US)
- Instrumental conditioning
- a process that an organism learns to associate
with its own behavior
22Nonassociative learning
Siphongill withdrawal reflex
Tailsiphon withdrawal reflex
- Habituation
- Reduction in response
- with repeatedly stimulus
- Dishabituation
- Recovery of habituation after a stronger stimulus
- Sensitization
- An enhanced response after a strong stimulus
23Circuit diagram of two reflexes
24Short term sensitization
- Short-term sensitization PKC-, PKA-, and
MAPK-induced phosphorylations of different
substrate proteins
25Long term sensitization
- Long term sensitization active cAMP/PKA pathway
and induce gene transcription and new protein
synthesis
26LTP
- LTP a persistent increase in synaptic strength
(amplitude of EPSP) induced by a brief burst of
spike activity in presynaptic afferents - CA3?CA1 synapse best understood pathway
- LTP is related with memory mechanism, but no
clearly association with any behavioral
observations
entorhindal cortex
Perforant path
Schaffer collateral path
27LTP cont.
Weak pathway ?
Strong pathway ?
- Cooperative probability of inducing LTP,
magnitude of resulting changes, increases with
of stimulated afferents - Associativity two distinct axon inputs converge
into same postsynaptic target - Input specificity LTP is only induced where
neuron receives strong input
28Mechanisms of induction of LTP
- Induction of early and late LTP depends on
intracellular Ca2i - NMDA receptor-dependent LTP
- - APV and MK-801 block induction of LTP
- NMDAR-independent LTP
- mGluR
- Induction of late LTP
- PKA, MARP
29Mechanisms of LTP expression
? new synaptic contacts
30LTP maintenance/LTD
- Early LTP maintenance needs phosphorylation of
substrate proteins - Late LTP maintenance needs gene expression and
protein synthesis - Long term depression (LTD) is believed to
mechanism by which learning is encoded in
cerebellum - LTD can be induced by low-frequency stimulation
over a long period - LTD share common molecular mechanisms with LTP
31Summary
- Learning associative and nonassociative
- Learning short-term and long-term sensitization
- LTP is related with memory
- LTD is related with learning in cerebellum
32Chapter 51
- Learning and Memory
- Brain Systems
33The Highlights
- Case History
- Memory Systems
- Declarative Memory
- Procedural Memory
- Emotional Memory
- The role of the amygdala
- The role of the cerebral cortex
34memory Pronunciation 'mem-rE,
- 1 a the power or process of reproducing or
recalling what has been learned and retained
especially through associative mechanisms b the
store of things learned and retained from an
organism's activity or experience as evidenced by
modification of structure or behavior or by
recall and recognition2 a commemorative
remembrance b the fact or condition of being
remembered 3 a a particular act of recall or
recollection b an image or impression of one
that is remembered c the time within which past
events can be or are remembered - 4 a a device or a component of a device in
which information especially for a computer can
be inserted and stored and from which it may be
extracted when wanted b capacity for storing
information - 5 a capacity for showing effects as the result
of past treatment or for returning to a former
condition -- used especially of a material (as
metal or plastic)
35Case History
- Age 9 sustained laceration to supraorbital
region - Tests consistently failed to show any localized
epileptogenic area - Bilateral medial temporal lobe resection
performed - So what? Central to later ideas about multiple
memory systems
Fig. 51.1
36Memory Systems
- defined by both a unique set of operating
characteristics and by unique brain structures
and connections. - The anatomical pathways of the different memory
systems are not entirely separate.
Fig. 51.2
37Declarative Memory
- Major components cerebral cortical areas,
cortical areas surrounding hippocampus, and
hippocampus
Figure 51.3
38A Few Studies
Figure 51.6
(B) Outline of odor pairings used in training on
two sequential sets of paired associates, plus
stimuli used in tests for transitivity (C for A
Z for X) and symmetry (B for C Y for Z).
Figure 51.5
39Procedural Memory
- habits, skills and sensori-motor adaptations
that occur constantly in the background of all of
our intentional and planned behavior. - 2 subsystems
- 1.Neostriatal
- 2.Cerebellar
Place vs. response learning
Figure 51.9
40Emotional Memory
- Mediate preferences and aversion
- Amygdala plays critical role in fear conditioning
Figure 51.12
41A Few More Studies
Emotional Memory
Procedural Memory
Figure 51.10
Figure 51.13
42Amygdala and Memory
- Emotional events activate SNS and HPA axis
Figure 51.14
43Cerebral Cortex and Memory
- Provides detailed information to the
aforementioned memory systems - Experience-driven plasticity in adult cerebral
cortex - Removal of sensory input to primary sensory areas
causes a reorganization - Semantic memory
- Priming
- Working Memory
44What to remember
- Amygdala has outputs to both of the other memory
systems (declarative and procedural) - Cerebral cortex contributes substantially to all
three systems - There is some overlapping among the three memory
systems - Learning and memory can be highly variable among
individuals
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