4.7 Article

Covert Attention Increases the Gain of Stimulus-Evoked Population Codes

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 8, Pages 1802-1815

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2186-20.2020

Keywords

attention; contrast response functions; EEG; encoding model; population codes

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [5RO1 MH087214-08]

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Covert spatial attention increases the amplitude of spatially tuned population responses in the early stage of sensory processing, and this effect scales with stimulus contrast. Overall, attention enhances the gain of spatial population codes during the first wave of visual processing.
Covert spatial attention has a variety of effects on the responses of individual neurons. However, relatively little is known about the net effect of these changes on sensory population codes, even though perception ultimately depends on population activity. Here, we measured the EEG in human observers (male and female), and isolated stimulus-evoked activity that was phase-locked to the onset of attended and ignored visual stimuli. Using an encoding model, we reconstructed spatially selective population tuning functions from the pattern of stimulus-evoked activity across the scalp. Our EEG-based approach allowed us to measure very early visually evoked responses occurring similar to 100 ms after stimulus onset. In Experiment 1, we found that covert attention increased the amplitude of spatially tuned population responses at this early stage of sensory processing. In Experiment 2, we parametrically varied stimulus contrast to test how this effect scaled with stimulus contrast. We found that the effect of attention on the amplitude of spatially tuned responses increased with stimulus contrast, and was well described by an increase in response gain (i.e., a multiplicative scaling of the population response). Together, our results show that attention increases the gain of spatial population codes during the first wave of visual processing.

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