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Attention System Research Articles

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1927 Articles

Published in last 50 years

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  • Visual Spatial Attention
  • Visual Spatial Attention
  • Visual Attention
  • Visual Attention
  • Auditory Attention
  • Auditory Attention

Articles published on Attention System

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Dynamic coupled coordination and spatial correlation between ice-snow tourism network attention and tourism industry development systems: Evidence from 31 provinces of China

Dynamic coupled coordination and spatial correlation between ice-snow tourism network attention and tourism industry development systems: Evidence from 31 provinces of China

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  • Journal IconResearch in Cold and Arid Regions
  • Publication Date IconSep 30, 2024
  • Author Icon Qiuling Ge + 2
Open Access Icon Open Access
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The Impact of Diglossia on Executive Functions and on Reading in Arabic.

In contrast to most other languages, where the spoken and written words are similar, children that have mastered Spoken Arabic (SA) learn to read a new written form of Arabic usually called Literary Arabic (LA). This phenomenon is called "diglossia". Based on a series of studies comparing monolingual Arabic speaking and bilingual children, it has been suggested that Arabic speaking individuals develop metacognitive abilities that are considered bilinguals de facto. Some of the cognitive functions that would seem to benefit from fluency in more than one language are metalinguistic and metacognitive awareness. This review article summarizes the results of studies on the relationship between bilingualism, diglossia and executive functions (EFs) which involve metacognitive awareness, selective attention, control of inhibition and cognitive flexibility as well as working memory (phonemic manipulation and metalingual performances). The findings are in line with research results that have shown that bilingualism has a positive effect on the functioning of an individual's attentional system across the lifespan. The neural basis of diglossia in Arabic, as well as the conclusions and implications drawn from the impact of diglossia on EF and on reading in Arabic, are discussed.

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  • Journal IconBrain sciences
  • Publication Date IconSep 25, 2024
  • Author Icon Raphiq Ibrahim
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Flexible functional adaptation of selective attention in bilingualism

AbstractWe tested how the bilingual processing system adapts to high attentional processing loads, using a dual selective attention task. We also tested how this adaptation changes with maturation, by comparing the performance of monolingual and bilingual children and adults. Results showed equivalent performance on aspects of the dual attention task (auditory comprehension and visual task accuracy) for monolinguals and bilinguals in both age groups. Reaction times from the visual task however revealed differences between groups, with bilingual children's responses significantly slower relative to monolingual children under high processing load, but the bilingual adults' performance equivalent to their monolingual counterparts. The results suggest that the adaptation of bilingual selective attention changes with maturation: high attentional processing demands lead to economising of the available attentional capacity and task prioritisation in children, but these effects recede as the attentional system fully matures, resulting in consistent optimal performance across elements of multiple tasks in bilinguals.

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  • Journal IconBilingualism: Language and Cognition
  • Publication Date IconSep 20, 2024
  • Author Icon Jacqueline Phelps + 1
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Metacognitive Monitoring of the Visual System in Sustained Attention

Metacognitive Monitoring of the Visual System in Sustained Attention

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  • Journal IconJournal of Vision
  • Publication Date IconSep 15, 2024
  • Author Icon Cheongil Kim + 1
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Spatial prediction modulates the rhythm of attentional sampling.

Recent studies demonstrate that behavioral performance during visual spatial attention fluctuates at theta (4 to 8Hz) and alpha (8 to 16Hz) frequencies, linked to phase-amplitude coupling of neural oscillations within the visual and attentional system depending on task demands. To investigate the influence of prior spatial prediction, we employed an adaptive discrimination task with variable cue-target onset asynchronies (300 to 1,300ms) and different cue validity (100% & 50%). We recorded electroencephalography concurrently and adopted adaptive electroencephalography data analytical methods, namely, Holo-Holo-Hilbert spectral analysis and Holo-Hilbert cross-frequency phase clustering. Our findings indicate that response precision for near-threshold Landolt rings fluctuates at the theta band (4Hz) under certain predictions and at alpha & beta bands (15 & 19Hz) with uncertain predictions. Furthermore, spatial prediction strengthens theta-alpha modulations at parietal-occipital areas, frontal theta/parietal-occipital alpha phase-amplitude coupling, and within frontal theta-alpha phase-amplitude coupling. Notably, during the pretarget period, beta-modulated gamma oscillations in parietal-occipital areas predict response precision under uncertain prediction, while frontal theta/parietal-occipital alpha phase-amplitude coupling predicts response precision in spatially certain conditions. In conclusion, our study highlights the critical role of spatial prediction in attentional sampling rhythms with both behavioral and electroencephalography evidence.

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  • Journal IconCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
  • Publication Date IconSep 3, 2024
  • Author Icon Yih-Ning Huang + 2
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In search for evolutionary roots of a mindful cognition: A Darwinian view on sustained intentional awareness

In search for evolutionary roots of a mindful cognition: A Darwinian view on sustained intentional awareness

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  • Journal IconBioSystems
  • Publication Date IconSep 2, 2024
  • Author Icon Emiliano Bruner
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P16: The Efficacy of a Novel Multimodal Personalized Physical and Cognitive Training System for Neurocognitive Protection and Enhancement in Older Adults

P16: The Efficacy of a Novel Multimodal Personalized Physical and Cognitive Training System for Neurocognitive Protection and Enhancement in Older Adults

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  • Journal IconInternational Psychogeriatrics
  • Publication Date IconSep 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Melissa S.L Ng + 1
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Ventral attention network connectivity is linked to cortical maturation and cognitive ability in childhood.

The human brain experiences functional changes through childhood and adolescence, shifting from an organizational framework anchored within sensorimotor and visual regions into one that is balanced through interactions with later-maturing aspects of association cortex. Here, we link this profile of functional reorganization to the development of ventral attention network connectivity across independent datasets. We demonstrate that maturational changes in cortical organization link preferentially to within-network connectivity and heightened degree centrality in the ventral attention network, whereas connectivity within network-linked vertices predicts cognitive ability. This connectivity is associated closely with maturational refinement of cortical organization. Children with low ventral attention network connectivity exhibit adolescent-like topographical profiles, suggesting that attentional systems may be relevant in understanding how brain functions are refined across development. These data suggest a role for attention networks in supporting age-dependent shifts in cortical organization and cognition across childhood and adolescence.

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  • Journal IconNature neuroscience
  • Publication Date IconAug 23, 2024
  • Author Icon Hao-Ming Dong + 8
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Brain correlates of attentional load processing reflect degree of bilingual engagement: Evidence from EEG

The present study uses electroencephalography (EEG) with an N-back task (0-, 1-, and 2-back) to investigate if and how individual bilingual experiences modulate brain activity and cognitive processes. The N-back is an especially appropriate task given recent proposals situating bilingual effects on neurocognition within the broader attentional control system (Bialystok and Craik, 2022). Beyond its working memory component, the N-Back task builds in complexity incrementally, progressively taxing the attentional system. EEG, behavioral and language/social background data were collected from 60 bilinguals. Two cognitive loads were calculated: low (1-back minus 0-back) and high (2-back minus 0-back). Behavioral performance and brain recruitment were modeled as a function of individual differences in bilingual engagement. We predicted task performance as modulated by bilingual engagement would reflect cognitive demands of increased complexity: slower reaction times and lower accuracy, and increase in theta, decrease in alpha and modulated N2/P3 amplitudes. The data show no modulation of the expected behavioral effects by degree of bilingual engagement. However, individual differences analyses reveal significant correlations between non-societal language use in Social contexts and alpha in the low cognitive load condition and age of acquisition of the L2/2L1 with theta in the high cognitive load. These findings lend some initial support to Bialystok and Craik (2022), showing how certain adaptations at the brain level take place in order to deal with the cognitive demands associated with variations in bilingual language experience and increases in attentional load. Furthermore, the present data highlight how these effects can play out differentially depending on cognitive testing/modalities – that is, effects were found at the TFR level but not behaviorally or in the ERPs, showing how the choice of analysis can be deterministic when investigating bilingual effects.

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  • Journal IconNeuroImage
  • Publication Date IconAug 13, 2024
  • Author Icon Sergio Miguel Pereira Soares + 4
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Effects of virtual reality-based cognitive training for adolescents with depressive episodes: A pilot randomized controlled study

Effects of virtual reality-based cognitive training for adolescents with depressive episodes: A pilot randomized controlled study

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  • Journal IconPsychiatry Research
  • Publication Date IconAug 12, 2024
  • Author Icon Sihui Lyu + 15
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Dynamic adaptation to novelty in the brain is related to arousal and intelligence.

How does the human brain respond to novelty? Here, we address this question using fMRI data wherein human participants watch the same movie scene four times. On the first viewing, this movie scene is novel, and on later viewings it is not. We find that brain activity is lower-dimensional in response to novelty. At a finer scale, we find that this reduction in the dimensionality of brain activity is the result of increased coupling in specific brain systems, most specifically within and between the control and dorsal attention systems. Additionally, we found that novelty induced an increase in between-subject synchronization of brain activity in the same brain systems. We also find evidence that adaptation to novelty, herein operationalized as the difference between baseline coupling and novelty-response coupling, is related to fluid intelligence. Finally, using separately collected out-of-sample data, we find that the above results may be linked to psychological arousal.

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  • Journal IconbioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
  • Publication Date IconAug 6, 2024
  • Author Icon Jacob Tanner + 3
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Interaction of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex with the precuneal medial parietal cortex for the monitoring of information in working memory in the macaque monkey.

The executive control process of monitoring information in working memory depends on the mid-dorsolateral prefrontal cortical region (cytoarchitectonic areas 46 and 9/46) in interaction with the hippocampal memory system. Anatomical studies demonstrated strong connectivity between the mid-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and the medial parietal area PGm that lies on the precuneus. Area PGm is also strongly connected with the attentional system on the lateral inferior parietal lobule (area PG) and the limbic retrosplenial/posterior cingulate region that interacts with the hippocampal memory system. Thus, in terms of anatomical connectivity, area PGm appears to be a critical node for the integration of executive control processing from the prefrontal cortex with the online attentional and memory related processing. This hypothesis was tested in macaque monkeys with the crossed unilateral lesion methodology. A unilateral lesion in the mid-dorsolateral prefrontal cortex was combined with a unilateral lesion in area PGm in the opposite hemisphere. The results demonstrated an impairment on the externally ordered working memory task that assesses the monitoring of information in working memory. Thus, the medial parietal area PGm is a critical node in mediating the functional interaction between the prefrontal region for the executive control process of monitoring information and the memory system.

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  • Journal IconCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
  • Publication Date IconAug 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Michael Petrides + 3
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Individual differences in spatial working memory strategies differentially reflected in the engagement of control and default brain networks.

Spatial locations can be encoded and maintained in working memory using different representations and strategies. Fine-grained representations provide detailed stimulus information, but are cognitively demanding and prone to inexactness. The uncertainty in fine-grained representations can be compensated by the use of coarse, but robust categorical representations. In this study, we employed an individual differences approach to identify brain activity correlates of the use of fine-grained and categorical representations in spatial working memory. We combined data from six functional magnetic resonance imaging studies, resulting in a sample of $155$ ($77$ women, $25 \pm 5$ years) healthy participants performing a spatial working memory task. Our results showed that individual differences in the use of spatial representations in working memory were associated with distinct patterns of brain activity. Higher precision of fine-grained representations was related to greater engagement of attentional and control brain systems throughout the task trial, and the stronger deactivation of the default network at the time of stimulus encoding. In contrast, the use of categorical representations was associated with lower default network activity during encoding and higher frontoparietal network activation during maintenance. These results may indicate a greater need for attentional resources and protection against interference for fine-grained compared with categorical representations.

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  • Journal IconCerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
  • Publication Date IconAug 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Nina Purg Suljič + 7
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Individual differences in spatial working memory strategies differentially reflected in the engagement of control and default brain networks.

Spatial locations can be encoded and maintained in working memory using different representations and strategies. Fine-grained representations provide detailed stimulus information, but are cognitively demanding and prone to inexactness. The uncertainty in fine-grained representations can be compensated by the use of coarse, but robust categorical representations. In this study, we employed an individual differences approach to identify brain activity correlates of the use of fine-grained and categorical representations in spatial working memory. We combined data from six fMRI studies, resulting in a sample of 155 (77 women, 25 ± 5 years) healthy participants performing a spatial working memory task. Our results showed that individual differences in the use of spatial representations in working memory were associated with distinct patterns of brain activity. Higher precision of fine-grained representations was related to greater engagement of attentional and control brain systems throughout the task trial, and the stronger deactivation of the default network at the time of stimulus encoding. In contrast, the use of categorical representations was associated with lower default network activity during encoding and higher frontoparietal network activation during maintenance. These results may indicate a greater need for attentional resources and protection against interference for fine-grained compared to categorical representations.

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  • Journal IconbioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
  • Publication Date IconJul 31, 2024
  • Author Icon Nina Purg Suljic + 7
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Altered cerebellar effective connectivity in first-episode schizophrenia and long-term changes after treatment.

Cerebello-cortical functional dysconnectivity plays a key role in the pathology of schizophrenia (SZ). We aimed to investigate the changes in cerebello-cortical directional connectivity in patients with SZ. A total of 180 drug-naïve patients with first-episode SZ (54 reassessed after 1 year of treatment) and 166 healthy controls (HCs) were included. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to perform Granger causal analysis, in which each of the nine cerebellar functional systems was defined as a seed. The observed effective connectivity (EC) alterations at baseline were further assessed at follow-up and were associated with changes in psychotic symptom. We observed increased bottom-up EC in first-episode SZ from the cerebellum to the cerebrum (e.g. from the cerebellar attention and cingulo-opercular systems to the bilateral angular gyri, and from the cerebellar cingulo-opercular system to the right inferior frontal gyrus). In contrast, decreased top-down EC in the first-episode SZ was mainly from the cerebrum to the cerebellum (e.g. from the right inferior temporal gyrus, left middle temporal gyrus, left putamen, and right angular gyrus to the cerebellar language system). After 1 year of antipsychotic treatment, information projections from the cerebrum to the cerebellum were partly restored and positively related to symptom remission. These findings suggest that decreased top-down EC during the acute phase of SZ may be a state-dependent alteration related to symptoms and medication. However, increased bottom-up EC may reflect a persistent pathological trait.

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  • Journal IconPsychiatry and clinical neurosciences
  • Publication Date IconJul 28, 2024
  • Author Icon Xia Wei + 9
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No clear benefit of transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation for non-native speech sound learning

IntroductionLearning to understand and speak a new language can be challenging and discouraging for adults. One potential tool for improving learning is transcutaneous auricular vagus nerve stimulation (taVNS), which modulates perception, memory, and attention systems. It has recently been reported that taVNS can improve English speakers' ability to perceive unfamiliar Mandarin tones. The current project explored the potential benefits of taVNS for language learning beyond tone perception.MethodsWe studied adults' ability to perceive and produce unfamiliar speech sounds as well as any potential change in language learning motivation from pre- to post-training. Forty-five native English speakers were divided into three groups and were trained to perceive German sounds: one group received stimulation during easier-to-learn sounds (vowels), one group received stimulation during harder-to-learn sounds (fricatives), and a control group received no stimulation.Results and discussionWe did not find evidence that taVNS improved perception or production of the German sounds, but there was evidence that it did improve some aspects of motivation. Specifically, the group that received taVNS during easier sounds showed a significant decrease in feelings of tension/pressure about language learning, while the other groups did not. Overall, the present study does not find that taVNS holds benefits for the acquisition of new speech sounds; however, the field is nascent, and so the potential applications of taVNS for language learning remain to be clarified.

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  • Journal IconFrontiers in Language Sciences
  • Publication Date IconJul 25, 2024
  • Author Icon Claire T Honda + 3
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Fixating targets in visual search: The role of dorsal and ventral attention networks in the processing of relevance and rarity

Abstract The dorsal attention network, often observed to be activated in serial visual search tasks, has been associated with goal-directed attention, responsible for the processing of task relevance. In serial visual search, the moment of target detection constitutes not only a task-relevant event, but also a rare event. In the present fMRI experiment, we disentangled task relevance from item rarity using a fixation-based analysis approach. We used a multiple target search task, and participants had to report the number of targets among distractors in the display. We had also added rare distractors to the displays. We found that rare events (targets and rare distractors) activated the dorsal attention network more strongly than common distractors. More importantly, we observed that the left IPS and the left insula, belonging to the dorsal and ventral attention system, respectively, were more strongly activated for targets compared to rare distractors. Using multi-voxel pattern analysis, we found that activation in the TPJ, bilaterally, an area also associated with the ventral attention system, distinguished between target and rare distractor fixations. These results point to an expanded role of the TPJ that seems to process post-perceptual information which is linked to task relevance.

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  • Journal IconImaging Neuroscience
  • Publication Date IconJul 17, 2024
  • Author Icon Anja Ischebeck + 5
Open Access Icon Open Access
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Integrating brain function and structure in the study of the human attentional networks: a functionnectome study

Attention is a heterogeneous function theoretically divided into different systems. While functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) has extensively characterized their functioning, the role of white matter in cognitive function has gained recent interest due to diffusion-weighted imaging advancements. However, most evidence relies on correlations between white matter properties and behavioral or cognitive measures. This study used a new method that combines the signal from distant voxels of fMRI images using the probability of structural connection given by high-resolution normative tractography. We analyzed three fMRI datasets with a visual perceptual task and three attentional manipulations: phasic alerting, spatial orienting, and executive attention. The phasic alerting network engaged temporal areas and their communication with frontal and parietal regions, with left hemisphere dominance. The orienting network involved bilateral fronto-parietal and midline regions communicating by association tracts and interhemispheric fibers. The executive attention network engaged a broad set of brain regions and white matter tracts connecting them, with a particular involvement of frontal areas and their connections with the rest of the brain. These results partially confirm and extend previous knowledge on the neural substrates of the attentional system, offering a more comprehensive understanding through the integration of structure and function.

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  • Journal IconBrain Structure and Function
  • Publication Date IconJul 6, 2024
  • Author Icon Mar Martín-Signes + 3
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Ciencia ciudadana aplicada en el recurso hídrico

In a complex system of understanding and attention to problems through science and research, citizen science represents a temporary incentive; It is not a new science, however, it can be strengthened and strengthened today more than ever. It infers a convergence of actors towards new paradigms and outside the walls, providing a panorama with more options aligned to the needs of the concrete reality based on a tacit finding. It is a science close to the convergence of scientists and societies to find, address and anticipate situations or problems that come together, its application in different sciences and disciplines contribute to experimental knowledge with a disciplinary, interdisciplinary and multidisciplinary scope. In the case of water resources, it favors obtaining results that imply the transversality of knowledge jointly and for the common good.

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  • Journal IconHallazgos
  • Publication Date IconJul 1, 2024
  • Author Icon Francisca Silva Hernández
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Algorithmic Attention Systems and Writing-as-Content

Algorithmic Attention Systems and Writing-as-Content

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  • Journal IconComputers and Composition
  • Publication Date IconJun 17, 2024
  • Author Icon Christine Masters-Wheeler
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