Abstract
One of the most central cognitive functions is attention. Its neuronal underpinnings have primarily been studied during conditions of sustained attention. Much less is known about the neuronal dynamics underlying the processes of shifting attention in space, as compared to maintaining it on one stimulus, and of deploying it to a particular stimulus. Here, we use ECoG to investigate four rhythms across large parts of the left hemisphere of two macaque monkeys during a task that allows investigation of deployment and shifting. Shifting involved a strong transient enhancement of power in a 2-7 Hz theta band in frontal, pre-motor and visual areas, and reductions of power in an 11-20 Hz beta band in a fronto-centro-parietal network and in a 29-36 Hz high-beta band in premotor cortex. Deployment of attention to the contralateral hemifield involved an enhancement of beta power in parietal areas, a concomitant reduction of high-beta power in pre-motor areas and an enhancement of power in a 60-76 Hz gamma band in extra-striate cortex. Effects due to shifting occurred earlier than effects due to deployment. These results demonstrate that the four investigated rhythms are involved in attentional allocation, with striking differences between shifting and deployment between different brain areas.
Significance We are often confronted by many visual stimuli, and attentional mechanisms select one stimulus for in-depth processing. This involves that attention is shifted between stimuli and deployed to one stimulus at a time. Prior studies have revealed that these processes are subserved by several brain rhythms. Therefore, we recorded brain activity in macaque monkeys with many electrodes distributed over large parts of their left hemisphere, while they performed a task that involved shifting and deploying attention. We found four dominant rhythms: theta (2-7 Hz), beta (11-20 Hz), high-beta (29-36 Hz) and gamma (60-76 Hz). Attentional shifting and deployment involved dynamic modulations in the strength of those rhythms with high specificity in space and time.