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Modulation of neural activities by enhanced local selection in the processing of compound stimuli

✍ Scribed by Shihui Han; Xun He


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2003
Tongue
English
Weight
621 KB
Volume
19
Category
Article
ISSN
1065-9471

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

The global precedence effect refers to the findings that responses are faster to a global structure than to its local parts and local responses are slowed by incongruent global information. We recorded high‐density event‐related potentials (ERPs) to study the role of enhanced local selection in the global precedence effect. Hierarchical stimuli were compound letters in which the local letters were either identical (homogeneous stimuli) or the central local letter was brighter than (bright stimuli) or different in color from the others (red stimuli). Subjects were asked to attend to the pop‐out local letter of the red and bright stimuli during the local task whereas there was no such instruction for the homogeneous stimuli. Top‐down attention to the pop‐out local item weakened the global reaction time advantage and the interference effect. The enhanced local selection decreased the amplitude of an occipito‐temporal negativity between 240–360 msec but increased the amplitude of a frontal‐central negativity between 260–320 msec related to local processing. The incongruency between global and local letters enlarged the posterior N2 in the local condition and this effect was eliminated by enhanced local selection. These effects were evident regardless of whether the pop‐out local letter was defined by color or luminance difference. The results support the proposal that distinct neural mechanisms over the posterior and anterior areas are engaged in the selection process that contributes to local processing of compound stimuli. Hum. Brain Mapping 19:273–281, 2003. © 2003 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.


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