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Spatio-temporal indications of sub-cortical involvement in leftward bias of spatial attention
Authors:Okon-Singer Hadas  Podlipsky Ilana  Siman-Tov Tali  Ben-Simon Eti  Zhdanov Andrey  Neufeld Miri Y  Hendler Talma
Institution:a Functional Brain Center, Wohl Institute for Advanced Imaging, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Israel;b Cognitive Neurology Unit, Rambam Health Care Campus, Haifa, Israel;c Sackler Faculty of Medicine, Tel Aviv University, Israel;d EEG and Epilepsy Unit, Department of Neurology, Tel Aviv Sourasky Medical Center, Israel
Abstract:A leftward bias is well known in humans and animals, and commonly related to the right hemisphere dominance for spatial attention. Our previous fMRI study suggested that this bias is mediated by faster conduction from the right to left parietal cortices, than the reverse (Siman-Tov et al., 2007). However, the limited temporal resolution of fMRI and evidence on the critical involvement of sub-cortical regions in orienting of spatial attention suggested further investigation of the leftward bias using multi-scale measurement. In this simultaneous EEG-fMRI study, healthy participants were presented with face pictures in either the right or left visual fields while performing a central fixation task. Temporo-occipital event related potentials, time-locked to the stimulus onset, showed an association between faster conduction from the right to the left hemisphere and higher fMRI activation in the left pulvinar nucleus following left visual field stimulation. This combined-modal finding provides original evidence of the involvement of sub-cortical central attention-related regions in the leftward bias. This assertion was further strengthened by a DCM analysis designated at cortical (i.e., inferior parietal sulcus; IPS) and sub-cortical (pulvinar nucleus) attention-related nodes that revealed: 1. Stronger inter-hemispheric connections from the right to left than vice versa, already at the pulvinar level. 2. Stronger connections within the right than the left hemisphere, from the pulvinar to the IPS. This multi-level neural superiority can guide future efforts in alleviating attention deficits by focusing on improving network connectivity.
Keywords:Cross-correlation  Dynamic causal modeling (DCM)  Inferior parietal sulcus  Inter-hemispheric transfer time  Pulvinar  Simultaneous ERP–  fMRI
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