Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration

Multisensory integration has been traditionally thought to rely on a restricted set of multisensory brain areas, and to occur automatically and pre-attentively. More recently, it has become evident that multisensory interactions can be found almost everywhere in the brain, including areas involved i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Emiliano Macaluso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/ic959
id doaj-1b7c7d29348d448f9b1e46d378138f49
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1b7c7d29348d448f9b1e46d378138f492020-11-25T04:10:41ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952011-10-01210.1068/ic95910.1068_ic959Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory IntegrationEmiliano Macaluso0Santa Lucia FoundationMultisensory integration has been traditionally thought to rely on a restricted set of multisensory brain areas, and to occur automatically and pre-attentively. More recently, it has become evident that multisensory interactions can be found almost everywhere in the brain, including areas involved in attention control and areas modulated by attention. In a series of fMRI experiments, we manipulated concurrently the position of multisensory stimuli and the distribution of spatial attention. This enabled us to highlight the role of high-order fronto-parietal areas, as well as sensory-specific occipital cortex, for multisensory processing and spatial attention control. We found that specific task constraints regarding the nature of attentional deployment (endogenous vs. exogenous), the spatial relationship between stimulus position and attended location, and attentional load shape the interplay between attention and multisensory processing. We suggest that multisensory integration acts as a saliency-defining process that can interact with attentional control beyond any within-modality mechanism. We propose that an anatomically-distributed, but functionally-integrated, representation of space makes use of multisensory interactions to help attention selecting relevant spatial locations. Stimuli at the attended location undergo enhanced processing, including boosting of multisensory signals there. In this perspective, attention and multisensory integration operate in an interactive manner jointly determining the activity of a wide-spread network that includes high-order fronto-parietal regions and sensory-specific areas.https://doi.org/10.1068/ic959
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emiliano Macaluso
spellingShingle Emiliano Macaluso
Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration
i-Perception
author_facet Emiliano Macaluso
author_sort Emiliano Macaluso
title Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration
title_short Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration
title_full Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration
title_fullStr Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration
title_full_unstemmed Representing Space through the Interplay between Attention and Multisensory Integration
title_sort representing space through the interplay between attention and multisensory integration
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2011-10-01
description Multisensory integration has been traditionally thought to rely on a restricted set of multisensory brain areas, and to occur automatically and pre-attentively. More recently, it has become evident that multisensory interactions can be found almost everywhere in the brain, including areas involved in attention control and areas modulated by attention. In a series of fMRI experiments, we manipulated concurrently the position of multisensory stimuli and the distribution of spatial attention. This enabled us to highlight the role of high-order fronto-parietal areas, as well as sensory-specific occipital cortex, for multisensory processing and spatial attention control. We found that specific task constraints regarding the nature of attentional deployment (endogenous vs. exogenous), the spatial relationship between stimulus position and attended location, and attentional load shape the interplay between attention and multisensory processing. We suggest that multisensory integration acts as a saliency-defining process that can interact with attentional control beyond any within-modality mechanism. We propose that an anatomically-distributed, but functionally-integrated, representation of space makes use of multisensory interactions to help attention selecting relevant spatial locations. Stimuli at the attended location undergo enhanced processing, including boosting of multisensory signals there. In this perspective, attention and multisensory integration operate in an interactive manner jointly determining the activity of a wide-spread network that includes high-order fronto-parietal regions and sensory-specific areas.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/ic959
work_keys_str_mv AT emilianomacaluso representingspacethroughtheinterplaybetweenattentionandmultisensoryintegration
_version_ 1724419694821113856