To determine the manner in which attention is distributed among numerous locations in the visual space, we used a multifocal recording technique that allowed simultaneous recordings of evoked cortical activity from 12 visual field areas out to 23.6°. We found that multifocal visual evoked potential (mfVEP) amplitude was larger when a region of visual space was attended than when it was not attended. The magnitude of this effect was inversely related to visual field eccentricity and there was no attention-related modulation of VEP amplitude for the most eccentric region. In addition, we found that mfVEP amplitudes in the regions contiguous to the attended region could also be larger, depending upon their spatial relationship to the attended region. Specifically, amplitudes in more central regions on the `meridian of attention' were larger when the subject attended anywhere along that meridian.
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