Litcius/Paper detail

The human endogenous attentional control network includes a ventro-temporal cortical node

Ilaria Sani, Heiko Stemmann, Bradley Caron, Daniel Bullock, Torsten Stemmler, Manfred Fahle, Franco Pestilli, Winrich A. Freiwald

2021Nature Communications92 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Endogenous attention is the cognitive function that selects the relevant pieces of sensory information to achieve goals and it is known to be controlled by dorsal fronto-parietal brain areas. Here we expand this notion by identifying a control attention area located in the temporal lobe. By combining a demanding behavioral paradigm with functional neuroimaging and diffusion tractography, we show that like fronto-parietal attentional areas, the human posterior inferotemporal cortex exhibits significant attentional modulatory activity. This area is functionally distinct from surrounding cortical areas, and is directly connected to parietal and frontal attentional regions. These results show that attentional control spans three cortical lobes and overarches large distances through fiber pathways that run orthogonally to the dominant anterior-posterior axes of sensory processing, thus suggesting a different organizing principle for cognitive control.

Topics & Concepts

Attentional controlNeurosciencePosterior parietal cortexCognitionParietal lobeSensory systemNeuroimagingTractographyTemporal lobePsychologyHuman brainFrontal lobeCortex (anatomy)Diffusion MRICognitive psychologyMedicineMagnetic resonance imagingRadiologyEpilepsyFunctional Brain Connectivity StudiesAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and ApplicationsNeural and Behavioral Psychology Studies