4.7 Article

Role of Inferior Frontal Junction (IFJ) in the Control of Feature versus Spatial Attention

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 38, Pages 8065-8074

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2883-20.2021

Keywords

feature attention; fMRI; inferior frontal junction; MVPA

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [MH117991]

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Feature-based visual attention relies on the inferior frontal junction (IFJ) for control, while the debate continues regarding its role in spatial attention control. Functional connectivity between the right IFJ and visual cortex (V4) is associated with subsequent attentional selection of targets and behavioral performance during feature attention, but not during spatial attention.
Feature-based visual attention refers to preferential selection and processing of visual stimuli based on their nonspatial attrib-utes, such as color or shape. Recent studies have highlighted the inferior frontal junction (IFJ) as a control region for feature but not spatial attention. However, the extent to which IFJ contributes to spatial versus feature attention control remains a topic of debate. We investigated in humans of both sexes the role of IFJ in the control of feature versus spatial attention in a cued visual spatial (attend-left or attend-right) and feature (attend-red or attend-green) attention task using fMRI. Analyzing cue-related fMRI using both univariate activation and multivoxel pattern analysis, we found the following results in IFJ. First, in line with some prior studies, the univariate activations were not different between feature and spatial attentional control. Second, in contrast, the multivoxel pattern analysis decoding accuracy was above chance level for feature attention (attend-red vs attend-green) but not for spatial attention (attend-left vs attend-right). Third, while the decoding accuracy for feature attention was above chance level during attentional control in the cue-to-target interval, it was not during target proc-essing. Fourth, the right IFJ and visual cortex (V4) were observed to be functionally connected during feature but not during spatial attention control, and this functional connectivity was positively associated with subsequent attentional selection of targets in V4, as well as with behavioral performance. These results support a model in which IFJ plays a crucial role in top-down control of visual feature but not visual spatial attention.

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