Abstract

Attentional selection shapes human perception, enhancing relevant information, according to behavioral goals. While many studies have investigated individual neural signatures of attention, here we used multivariate decoding of electrophysiological brain responses (MEG/EEG) to track and compare multiple component processes of selective attention. Auditory cues instructed participants to select a particular visual target, embedded within a subsequent stream of displays. Combining single and multi-item displays with different types of distractors allowed multiple aspects of information content to be decoded, distinguishing distinct components of attention, as the selection process evolved. Although the task required comparison of items to an attentional “template” held in memory, signals consistent with such a template were largely undetectable throughout the preparatory period but re-emerged after presentation of a non-target choice display. Choice displays evoked strong neural representation of multiple target features, evolving over different timescales. We quantified five distinct processing operations with different time-courses. First, visual properties of the stimulus were strongly represented. Second, the candidate target was rapidly identified and localized in multi-item displays, providing the earliest evidence of modulation by behavioral relevance. Third, the identity of the target continued to be enhanced, relative to distractors. Fourth, only later was the behavioral significance of the target explicitly represented in single-item displays. Finally, if the target was not identified and search was to be resumed, then an attentional template was weakly reactivated. The observation that an item's behavioral relevance directs attention in multi-item displays prior to explicit representation of target/non-target status in single-item displays is consistent with two-stage models of attention.

Highlights

  • Our perception of the world is constantly shaped by attentional selection, enhancing relevant over irrelevant information, to achieve our behavioral goals

  • EEG data for 4 participants were excluded from the Multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) analysis due to a technical issue

  • Since higher visual regions are specialized for object-level processing, and can contain template-like signals (Stokes et al, 2009), we subsequently examined a broad extrastriate visual cortex (ESV) ROI from the Fedorenko et al

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Summary

Introduction

Our perception of the world is constantly shaped by attentional selection, enhancing relevant over irrelevant information, to achieve our behavioral goals. Much evidence suggests that attentional selection is achieved through a process of biased, integrated competition across a broad sensorimotor network (Duncan et al, 1997). While many studies have investigated the time-course of individual neural signatures of attention in humans and animal models, it is informative to compare multiple components of the selection process within the same paradigm. We used simultaneous MEG/EEG to examine the time-course and content of different components of attentional selection. We combined single-item and multi-item search displays with different types of distractors to allow multiple aspects of information content to be decoded from the neural signal, distinguishing distinct components of attention as the selection process evolved

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