Abstract

In this study we used a repeated measures design and univariate analysis of variance to study the respective effects of ISI, spatial attention and stimulus detection on the strengths of the sources previously identified by modelling SEFs during the 200 ms following mentally counted left median nerve stimuli delivered at long and random ISIs (Part I). We compared the SEF source strengths in response to frequent and rare stimuli, both in detection and ignoring conditions. This permitted us to establish a hierarchy in the effects of ISI, attention and stimulus detection on the activation of the cortical network of SEF sources distributed in SI and posterior parietal cortex contralateral to stimulation, and in the parietal operculum (SII) and premotor frontal cortex of both hemispheres. In all experimental conditions the SI and parietal opercular sources were the most active. All sources were more active in response to stimuli delivered at long and random ISIs and the frontal sources were activated only in this condition of stimulation. Driving the subject's attention toward the side stimulated had no detectable effect on the activity of SEF sources at short ISI. At long ISIs mental counting of the stimuli increased the responses of all sources except SI. These results suggest that activation of frontal sources during mental counting could reflect a working memory process, and that of posterior parietal sources a spatial attention effect detectable only at long ISIs.

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