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Alpha and theta rhythm support perceptual and attentional sampling in vision

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2024
Citazione:
Alpha and theta rhythm support perceptual and attentional sampling in vision / Gallina, J.; Ronconi, L.; Marsicano, G.; Bertini, C.. - In: CORTEX. - ISSN 0010-9452. - 177:(2024), pp. 84-99. [10.1016/j.cortex.2024.04.020]
Abstract:
The visual system operates rhythmically, through timely coordinated perceptual and attentional processes, involving coexisting patterns in the alpha range (7–13 Hz) at ∼10 Hz, and theta (3–6 Hz) range, respectively. Here we aimed to disambiguate whether variations in task requirements, in terms of attentional demand and side of target presentation, might influence the occurrence of either perceptual or attentional components in behavioral visual performance, also uncovering possible differences in the sampling mechanisms of the two cerebral hemispheres. To this aim, visuospatial performance was densely sampled in two versions of a visual detection task where the side of target presentation was fixed (Task 1), with participants monitoring one single hemifield, or randomly varying across trials, with participants monitoring both hemifields simultaneously (Task 2). Performance was analyzed through spectral decomposition, to reveal behavioral oscillatory patterns. For Task 1, when attentional resources where focused on one hemifield only, the results revealed an oscillatory pattern fluctuating at ∼10 Hz and ∼6–9 Hz, for stimuli presented to the left and the right hemifield, respectively, possibly representing a perceptual sampling mechanism with different efficiency within the left and the right hemispheres. For Task 2, when attentional resources were simultaneously deployed to the two hemifields, a ∼5 Hz rhythm emerged both for stimuli presented to the left and the right, reflecting an attentional sampling process, equally supported by the two hemispheres. Overall, the results suggest that distinct perceptual and attentional sampling mechanisms operate at different oscillatory frequencies and their prevalence and hemispheric lateralization depends on task requirements.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Alpha oscillations; Hemispheric differences; Rhythmic sampling; Theta oscillations; Visual attention; Visual perception
Elenco autori:
Gallina, J.; Ronconi, L.; Marsicano, G.; Bertini, C.
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unisr.it/handle/20.500.11768/198767
Pubblicato in:
CORTEX
Journal
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