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Apr 2001
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ISBN
0262024934
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| 344 pp.
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| 125 illus.
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| Visual Attention and Cortical Circuits |
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Jochen Braun
,
Christof Koch
and
Joel L. Davis
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The neurobiology and psychology of attention have much to learn from
each other. Neurobiologists recognize that responses in sensory cortex
depend on the behavioral relevance of a stimulus, but have few ways to
study how perception changes as a result. Psychologists have the
conceptual and methodological tools to do just that, but are
confounded by the multiple interpretations and theoretical
ambiguities. This book attempts to bridge the two fields and to derive
a comprehensive theory of attention from both neurobiological and
psychological data. It highlights situations where attention can be
seen to alter both neural activity and psychophysical
performance/phenomenal experience. This "bicultural" approach
contributes not only to attention research but to the larger goal of
linking neural activity to conscious experience.
The book focuses mainly on the effects of visual attention on the
ventral and dorsal streams of visual cortex in humans and monkeys and
the associated changes in visual performance. Several larger findings
emerge: attention may involve more than one neural system; attention
modulates all stages of cortical visual processing; the effect of
attention is constrained by the intrinsic connectivity of cortex and
the resulting contextual interactions; and the notion of a "saliency
map" remains central to thinking about visual attention. The book also
considers several approaches to evaluating the same variable through
different methods, such as behavioral measurements, functional
imaging, and single-unit recording.
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| Table of Contents |
| | Preface |
| | Overview
by Jochen Braun and Christof Koch |
| 1 | | Imaging Expectations and Attentional Modulations in the Human Brain
by Maurizio Corbeita and Gordon L. Shulman |
| 2 | | Neuronal Correlates of Attention in Human Visual Cortex
by David J. Heeger, Sunil P. Gandhi, Alexander C. Huk and Geoffrey M. Boynton |
| 3 | | Capacity Limits in Selective Attention: Behavioral Evidence and Implications for Neural Activity
by Nilli Lavie |
| 4 | | Frontal Lobe Function and the Control of Visual Attention
by John Duncan |
| 5 | | Attentional Modulation of Contextual Influences
by Minami Ito, Gerald Westheimer and Charles D. Gilbert |
| 6 | | Effects of Attention on the Responsiveness and Selectivity of Individual Neurons in Visual Cerebral Cortex
by John H. R. Maunsell and Carrie J. McAdams |
| 7 | | Neural Mechanisms of Attentional Selection
by John H. Reynolds and Robert Desimone |
| 8 | | From Attention to Action in Frontal Cortex
by Kirk G. Thompson, Narcisse P. Bichot and Jeffrey D. Schall |
| 9 | | Separating Attention from Chance in Active Visual Search
by Brad C. Motter and James W. Holsapple |
| 10 | | Two Computational Models of Attention
by George Sperling, Adam Reeves, Erik Blaser, Zhong-Lin Lu and Erich Weichselgartner |
| 11 | | Perceptual Consequences of Multilevel Selection
by Jochn Braun, Christof Koch, D. Kathleen Lee and Laurent Itti |
| 12 | | The Resolution of Ambiguous Motion: Attentional Modulation and Development
by Shinsuke Shimojo, Katsumi Watanabe and Christian Scheier |
| 13 | | The Relevance of Fisher Information for Theories of Cortical Computation and Attention
by Alexandre Pouget, Sophie Deneve and Peter E. Latham |
| 14 | | From Foundation Principles to a Hierarchical Selection Circuit for Attention
by John K. Tsotsos, Sean M. Culhane and florin Cutzu |
| | Contributors |
| | Index |
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