Training qualitatively shifts the neural mechanisms that support attentional selection
Abstract
Attention supports the selection of relevant sensory information from competing irrelevant sensory information. This selective processing is thought to be supported via the attentional gain amplification of sensory responses evoked by attended compared to unattended stimuli. However, recent studies in highly trained subjects suggest that attentional gain plays a relatively modest role and that other types of neural modulations, such as a...
Paper Details
Title
Training qualitatively shifts the neural mechanisms that support attentional selection
Published Date
Dec 4, 2016
Journal
Pages
091413
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