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Separable neuronal contributions to covertly attended locations and movement goals in macaque frontal cortex.

Aldo GenovesioRossella CirilloSteven P Wise
Published in: Science advances (2021)
We investigated the spatial representation of covert attention and movement planning in monkeys performing a task that used symbolic cues to decouple the locus of covert attention from the motor target. In the three frontal areas studied, most spatially tuned neurons reflected either where attention was allocated or the planned saccade. Neurons modulated by both covert attention and the motor plan were in the minority. Such dual-purpose neurons were especially rare in premotor and prefrontal cortex but were more common just rostral to the arcuate sulcus. The existence of neurons that indicate where the monkey was attending but not its movement goal runs counter to the idea that the control of spatial attention is entirely reliant on the neuronal circuits underlying motor planning. Rather, the presence of separate neuronal populations for each cognitive process suggests that endogenous attention is under flexible control and can be dissociated from motor intention.
Keyphrases
  • working memory
  • spinal cord
  • prefrontal cortex
  • functional connectivity
  • cerebral ischemia
  • mass spectrometry