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Our perception is facilitated if we know where and when a sensory stimulus will occur. This phenomenon is accounted for by spatial and temporal orienting of attention. Whereas spatial orienting of attention has repeatedly been shown to involve spatially specific modulations of ongoing oscillations within sensory cortex, it is not clear to what extent anticipatory modulations of ongoing oscillations are involved in temporal orienting of attention. To address this, we recorded magnetoencephalography while human participants performed a tactile discrimination task. We cued participants to the left or the right hand, after which a tactile stimulus was presented at one of several fixed temporal delays. We thus assessed whether and how ongoing sensorimotor oscillations are modulated during tactile anticipation. We provide evidence for three phenomena. First, orienting to an upcoming tactile event involves a spatially specific contralateral suppression of alpha- and beta-band oscillations within sensorimotor cortex. Second, this modulation is deployed with temporal specificity, and this is more pronounced for beta-band compared with alpha-band oscillations. Third, the contralateral suppression of beta-band oscillations is associated with faster responses to subsequently presented tactile stimuli. Control measures showed that these results cannot be explained by motor planning or execution. We conclude that the modulation of ongoing oscillations within sensory cortex reflects a unifying mechanism underlying both spatial and temporal orienting of attention.

Original publication

DOI

10.1523/JNEUROSCI.5630-10.2011

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Neurosci

Publication Date

09/02/2011

Volume

31

Pages

2016 - 2024

Keywords

Adult, Alpha Rhythm, Attention, Beta Rhythm, Brain Mapping, Electromyography, Female, Fourier Analysis, Functional Laterality, Hand, Humans, Magnetoencephalography, Male, Middle Aged, Orientation, Physical Stimulation, Reaction Time, Somatosensory Cortex, Space Perception, Touch, Young Adult