Abstract

Endogenous cueing of attention enhances sensory processing of the attended stimulus (perceptual sensitivity) and prioritizes information from the attended location for guiding behavioral decisions (spatial choice bias). Here, we test whether sensitivity and bias effects of endogenous spatial attention are under the control of common or distinct mechanisms. Human observers performed a multialternative visuospatial attention task with probabilistic spatial cues. Observers’ behavioral choices were analyzed with a recently developed multidimensional signal detection model (the m-ADC model). The model effectively decoupled the effects of spatial cueing on sensitivity from those on spatial bias and revealed striking dissociations between them. Sensitivity was highest at the cued location and not significantly different among uncued locations, suggesting a spotlight-like allocation of sensory resources at the cued location. On the other hand, bias varied systematically with cue validity, suggesting a graded allocation of decisional priority across locations. Cueing-induced modulations of sensitivity and bias were uncorrelated within and across subjects. Bias, but not sensitivity, correlated with key metrics of prioritized decision-making, including reaction times and decision optimality indices. In addition, we developed a novel metric, differential risk curvature, for distinguishing bias effects of attention from those of signal expectation. Differential risk curvature correlated selectively with m-ADC model estimates of bias but not with estimates of sensitivity. Our results reveal dissociable effects of endogenous attention on perceptual sensitivity and choice bias in a multialternative choice task and motivate the search for the distinct neural correlates of each.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Attention is often studied as a unitary phenomenon. Yet, attention can both enhance the perception of important stimuli (sensitivity) and prioritize such stimuli for decision-making (bias). Employing a multialternative spatial attention task with probabilistic cueing, we show that attention affects sensitivity and bias through dissociable mechanisms. Specifically, the effects on sensitivity alone match the notion of an attentional “spotlight.” Our behavioral model enables quantifying component processes of attention, and identifying their respective neural correlates.

Highlights

  • Attention is the remarkable cognitive capacity that enables us to select and process relevant information in our sensory environment

  • To understand the neural mechanisms by which attention operates in the brain, it is essential to tease apart its component processes

  • Multialternative endogenous attention task (Posner et al 1980), and a multidimensional signal detection model, we show that attention affects perceptual sensitivity and choice bias through dissociable mechanisms

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Summary

Introduction

Attention is the remarkable cognitive capacity that enables us to select and process relevant information in our sensory environment. Activity in other frontal areas, including the anterior prefrontal cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, associated with early representation of visual stimuli is known to modulate with www.jn.org criterion changes and decision confidence in a range of 2-AFC perceptual decision tasks, involving stimulus detection, contrast, or orientation discrimination (de Lafuente and Romo 2005; Fleming et al 2010; Katsuki and Constantinidis 2012; Rahnev et al 2016) Following these reports, a recent study showed that lateral prefrontal cortical activity reflects modulations of both sensitivity and criteria in a 2-AFC attention task involving orientation change detection (Luo and Maunsell 2018). Recent literature suggests that superior colliculus (SC), a midbrain structure, could be involved in the modulation of both sensitivity and choice criteria (Crapse et al 2018; Lovejoy and Krauzlis 2017) during discrimination and detection tasks

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