Abstract

In our daily lives, the visual system receives a plethora of visual information that competes for the brain's limited processing capacity. Nevertheless, not all visual information is useful for our cognitive, emotional, social, and ultimately survival purposes. Therefore, the brain employs mechanisms to select critical information and thereby optimizes its limited resources. Attention is the selective process that serves such a function. In particular, covert spatial attention - attending to a particular location in the visual field without eye movements - improves spatial resolution and paradoxically deteriorates temporal resolution. The neural correlates underlying these attentional effects still remainelusive. In this work, we tested a neural model's predictions that explain these phenomena based on interactions between channels with different spatiotemporal sensitivities - namely, the magnocellular (transient) and parvocellular (sustained) channels. More specifically, our model postulates that spatial attention enhances activities in the parvocellular pathway, thereby producing improved performance in spatial resolution tasks. However, the enhancement of parvocellular activities leads to decreased magnocellular activities due to parvo-magno inhibitory interactions. As a result, spatial attention hampers temporal resolution. We compared the predictions of the model to psychophysical data, and show that our model can account qualitatively and quantitatively for the effects of spatial attention on spatial and temporal acuity.

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