Human brain activation elicited by the localization of sounds delivering at attended or unattended positions: an fMRI/MEG study

Human brain Brain mapping
DOI: 10.1007/s10339-006-0093-3 Publication Date: 2006-08-07T12:29:48Z
ABSTRACT
The visual meridian effect, as a consequence of programming the necessary ocular movements for visual object localization (Rizzolatti et al. 1987), was interpreted as an evidence of a supramodal network for visual attention to space, which may be critical for reorienting the focus of attention toward stimuli appearing at unattended locations. This hypothesis was confirmed in a behavioural study also for auditory and for bimodal audio–visual stimulation (Ferlazzo et al. 2001). The present study is aimed at observing: the cerebral circuit underling the auditory meridian effect; whether this circuit is related with the network involved in reorienting the focus of attention toward stimuli appearing at an unattended location; whether a functional temporal dynamics can be defined in these areas.
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