(Press-News.org) WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. – July 23, 2012 – Ever wonder how the human brain, which is constantly bombarded with millions of pieces of visual information, can filter out what's unimportant and focus on what's most useful?
The process is known as selective attention and scientists have long debated how it works. But now, researchers at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center have discovered an important clue. Evidence from an animal study, published in the July 22 online edition of the journal Nature Neuroscience, shows that the prefrontal cortex is involved in a previously unknown way.
Two types of attention are utilized in the selective attention process – bottom up and top down. Bottom-up attention is automatically guided to images that stand out from a background by virtue of color, shape or motion, such as a billboard on a highway. Top-down attention occurs when one's focus is consciously shifted to look for a known target in a visual scene, as when searching for a relative in a crowd.
Traditionally, scientists have believed that separate areas of the brain controlled these two processes, with bottom-up attention occurring in the posterior parietal cortex and top-down attention occurring in the prefrontal cortex.
"Our findings provide insights on the neural mechanisms behind the guidance of attention," said Christos Constantinidis, Ph.D., associate professor of neurobiology and anatomy at Wake Forest Baptist and senior author of the study. "This has implications for conditions such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), which affects millions of people worldwide. People with ADHD have difficulty filtering information and focusing attention. Our findings suggest that both the ability to focus attention intentionally and shifting attention to eye-catching but sometimes unimportant stimuli depend on the prefrontal cortex."
In the Wake Forest Baptist study, two monkeys were trained to detect images on a computer screen while activity in both areas of the brain was recorded. The visual display was designed to let one image "pop out" due to its color difference from the background, such as a red circle surrounded by green. To trigger bottom-up attention, neither the identity nor the location of the pop-out image could be predicted before it appeared. The monkeys indicated that they detected the pop-out image by pushing a lever.
The neural activity associated with identifying the pop-out images occurred in the prefrontal cortex at the same time as in the posterior parietal cortex. This unexpected finding indicates early involvement of the prefrontal cortex in bottom-up attention, in addition to its known role in top-down attention, and provides new insights into the neural mechanisms of attention.
"We hope that our findings will guide future work targeting attention deficits," Constantinidis said.
###The research was supported by the National Eye Institute contract ROI EY016773 and the Tab Williams Family Endowment.
Fumi Katsuki, Ph.D., a post-doctoral fellow at Wake Forest Baptist, co-authored the study.
VIDEO:
Many animals spend time together in large groups not because they enjoy each other's company, but rather because it lowers their own chances of being eaten should an uninvited guest...
Click here for more information.
Many animals spend time together in large groups not because they enjoy each other's company, but rather because it lowers their own chances of being eaten should an uninvited guest arrive on the scene—or so the theory goes. Now, researchers who have ...
VIDEO:
This shows Natterer's bat catching a pair of copulating flies (black circle) from the cowshed ceiling and a Natterer's bat attacking an ultrasonic loudspeaker that plays fly copulation buzzes in...
Click here for more information.
If you are a fly living with bats in a cowshed, sex really could be the death of you. That's according to a study in the July 24th issue of Current Biology, a Cell Press publication, showing that bats eavesdrop on the sounds of fly sex ...
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Functional neurologic abnormalities due to prenatal alcohol exposure are common
A new study has examined heavy alcohol exposure during pregnancy using population-based data in Chile.
Approximately 80 percent of the children examined had one or more abnormalities associated with alcohol exposure.
Functional neurologic impairment was the most frequent and sometimes only sign of alcohol exposure.
Most children who are exposed to large amounts of alcohol while in the womb do not go on to develop fetal alcohol syndrome ...
Contact: Marguerite Beck
marbeck@wakehealth.edu
336-716-2415
Wake Forest School of Medicine
Ralph Hingson, Sc.D., M.P.H.
rhingson@mail.nih.gov
301-443-1274
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA)
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
When campuses and their surrounding communities can join forces to stop alcohol abuse
U.S. college students typically drink more than their non-college peers and are slow to 'mature out' of their harmful drinking patterns.
A new study examines a combined community-level and campus-level approach ...
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Disinhibition/drinking differences between African-American and European-American youth
African American adolescents drink less than European American adolescents.
A new study examines racial differences in disinhibition.
Results indicate that European American youth have higher levels of sensation seeking while African American youth have higher levels of impulsivity.
Compared to European American adolescents, African American adolescents are more likely to abstain from alcohol, drink less frequently, and engage in ...
Alcoholism: Clinical & Experimental Research
Alcoholism and HIV infection have different effects on visuomotor procedural memory processes
Visuomotor procedural memory processes include driving a car, riding a bike, and using a computer mouse.
This study examined the separate and combined injurious effects of chronic alcoholism and HIV infection upon visuomotor procedural memory processes.
Results indicate the two conditions differently affect the processes involved in procedural learning and memory of visuomotor information.
The different effects on memory processes ...
Liver cancer is the third leading cancer killer worldwide and new treatments are urgently needed.
This study shows that loss of a regulatory molecule called microRNA-122 leads to liver cancer.
The findings suggest that developing a drug that restores microRNA-122 levels might offer a new way to treat this deadly disease.
COLUMBUS, Ohio – A new study shows that loss of a small RNA molecule in liver cells might cause liver cancer and that restoring the molecule might slow tumor growth and offer a new way to treat the disease.
The animal study was led by researchers ...
A clinical study in a remote region of southwest Uganda has demonstrated the feasibility of using a health campaign to rapidly test a community for HIV and simultaneously offer prevention and diagnosis for a variety of other diseases in rural and resource-poor settings of sub-Saharan Africa.
At the XIX International AIDS Conference in Washington, D.C., the first results of this study, called the "Sustainable East Africa Research in Community Health (SEARCH) Collaboration," will be described by doctors at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), San Francisco ...
In January, 2012, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued new guidelines on dosing of an HIV medication used to treat people infected with both HIV and tuberculosis (TB) because of a potential interaction between two of the main drugs used to treat each disease.
The drug rifampin, used for treating TB, can lower levels of the HIV medicine efavirenz, so the FDA recommended that patients who weigh more than 50 kg (110 pounds) and who are taking both medications should get 30 percent larger doses of efavirenz (an increase from 600 mg to 800 mg).
Now, a new ...
MINNEAPOLIS – Watching videos on YouTube may be a new way to show the treatment for a common cause of vertigo, which often goes untreated by physicians, according to a study published in the July 24, 2012, print issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology.
Benign paroxysmal positional vertigo (BPPV) is an inner ear disorder that is a common cause of dizziness.
"This type of vertigo can be treated easily and quickly with a simple maneuver called the Epley maneuver, but too often the maneuver isn't used, and people are told to 'wait ...