戻る
「早戻しボタン」を押すと検索画面に戻ります。 [閉じる]

コーパス検索結果 (1語後でソート)

通し番号をクリックするとPubMedの該当ページを表示します
1 ed at the stimulation site, was amplified by visual attention.
2 teractions between cortical loci controlling visual attention.
3 thalamus in the interplay between memory and visual attention.
4  intriguing link between spatial hearing and visual attention.
5 al and audiovisual stimuli under auditory or visual attention.
6 ions, with higher ASSRs during auditory than visual attention.
7 er movement, in analogy to current models of visual attention.
8 a form of competitive selection required for visual attention.
9 ap for control of saccadic eye movements and visual attention.
10 ual stimuli under distributed versus focused visual attention.
11 tion and has been a focus of many studies on visual attention.
12 nificant role individual differences play in visual attention.
13 ed audiovisual attention relative to focused visual attention.
14 d context dependence of socially transmitted visual attention.
15 ints on the functional brain organization of visual attention.
16 ributed audiovisual attention versus focused visual attention.
17 on that is modulated by perceptual input and visual attention.
18 ature processing interfaces with its role in visual attention.
19  and disrupt the goal-directed allocation of visual attention.
20 ive connectivity of cerebellar crus I during visual attention.
21 efrontal cortex in the bottom-up guidance of visual attention.
22 es, and that the choice process is guided by visual attention.
23 on times, and reduced latencies to disengage visual attention.
24 man subjects as a marker for the strength of visual attention.
25 t saccades and by the visual system to guide visual attention.
26 gly contradictory findings on the effects of visual attention.
27 selection for saccades and the generation of visual attention.
28 key (macaca mulatta) is affected by top-down visual attention.
29 yers outperform non-players on some tests of visual attention.
30 d explain the link between microsaccades and visual attention.
31 ty limitations predicted by most theories of visual attention.
32 tial improvement in psychomotor function and visual attention.
33 ed focus on efficient coding in the field of visual attention.
34 y a key role in controlling the spotlight of visual attention.
35 id not support a high-level understanding of visual attention.
36  other information, a process referred to as visual attention.
37 ortex, and FEF modulates IPS, in relation to visual attention.
38 w details about neuronal interactions during visual attention.
39 graphic variables, miles driven, vision, and visual attention.
40 y deafness causes enhancements in peripheral visual attention.
41 increased demands on the limited capacity of visual attention.
42  impairments reflect temporal constraints on visual attention.
43 consider evidence for cholinergic support of visual attention.
44  between subcortical and cortical control of visual attention.
45 howing an auditory-phasic alerting effect in visual attention.
46 ly involved in decision-making and selective visual attention.
47 entifying the neural mechanisms of selective visual attention.
48 connection between cholinergic signaling and visual attention.
49 own to play a crucial role in the control of visual attention.
50 es but does depend on cognitive factors like visual attention.
51 specialized for the control of feature-based visual attention.
52                                              Visual attention affects both perception and neuronal re
53 es in humans have shown rapid modulations of visual attention after conditioned threat vs. safety cue
54                                    Selective visual attention allows the brain to focus on behavioral
55          Here we present evidence that human visual attention also includes a high-level category-spe
56 trate that CK1delta OE mice exhibit impaired visual attention and a lack of D-amphetamine-induced pla
57 f emotional perception and how it relates to visual attention and awareness is likely to require furt
58 nds as far as contributing to the control of visual attention and awareness.
59 e compared to chimpanzees, suggesting higher visual attention and curiosity.
60 e the temporal and spatial features of human visual attention and distinguish expertise level.
61  implications of this view for understanding visual attention and eye movement control.
62 ith all visual areas, has been implicated in visual attention and in control of eye movements.
63 the specific prefrontal circuits controlling visual attention and its neural correlates within the pr
64 cantly associated with poorer performance in visual attention and learning/concentration.
65                                We argue that visual attention and number word knowledge influence eac
66  conscious face perception in particular and visual attention and perceptual awareness in general.
67 activation in neural regions associated with visual attention and salience (e.g., precuneus, r = -0.3
68  part in the neuronal changes resulting from visual attention and stimulus salience.
69  could not be explained by global changes in visual attention and were specific to value and reward p
70 rtical dorsal attention network responses to visual attention and working memory tasks.
71 with deterioration in cognitive performance (visual attention and working memory).
72 r colliculus are involved in the guidance of visual attention, and describe the priority map model, w
73 ucidate relationships between eye movements, visual attention, and insight, all of which are employed
74 g contrast adaptation, surround suppression, visual attention, and multisensory integration.
75 vity was primarily associated with selective visual attention, and not oculomotor preparation.
76 he functioning of neural networks subserving visual attention, and that these changes are related to
77 ously, TRN activity is modified by shifts of visual attention, and these attentional changes could in
78                  Neuronal signals related to visual attention are found in widespread brain regions,
79                                    Shifts in visual attention are known to covertly enhance processin
80 on mechanisms--collectively termed selective visual attention--are guided by intrinsic, bottom-up and
81 ced changes in catecholamine transmission in visual attention areas (eg, occipital and superior parie
82 on of human white matter pathways subserving visual attention, as assessed by diffusion magnetic reso
83 on between bumping while walking and divided visual attention, as measured by the useful field of vie
84              It is now well established that visual attention, as measured with standard spatial atte
85 ociated with worse executive functioning and visual attention at 12 months.
86 ations, for example, auditory enhancement of visual attention (AV) and visual enhancement of auditory
87 so suggest a separate and additional bias of visual attention away from the affected hand.
88 us is suspected to have an important role in visual attention, based on its widespread connectivity w
89 re unveiled, and a representative successful visual attention behavior for each stage of the operatio
90 s gaze response will lead to the transfer of visual attention between crowd members, but it is not su
91 que was compared with training that requires visual attention but not exploration.
92 ditory attention, showing a reduction during visual attention, but no change during auditory attentio
93 arly deafness does not enhance all facets of visual attention, but rather its effects are quite speci
94 cortex are associated with eye movements and visual attention, but their specific contributions are p
95 t, while cholinergic enhancement facilitates visual attention by increasing activity in extrastriate
96 using a hierarchical approach to determining visual attention, by making an immediate decision based
97 d LTD-like plasticity suggest that voluntary visual attention can exert an important influence on the
98 ration of low-level perceptual responses and visual attention can explain microsaccade rate and direc
99                                              Visual attention can improve behavioral performance by a
100                Here, we investigated whether visual attention can modulate neural responses to other
101             It has been long debated whether visual attention can shift covertly, decoupled from prog
102 er a wide range of conditions, including how visual attention changes the gains of neurons in visual
103 mpromise, and reduced phase synchrony during visual attention compared with healthy children.
104 hypothesis that the mechanisms implicated in visual attention continue to modulate occipital cortex i
105 V1), and cuneus; neural phase synchrony to a visual attention cue during visual-motor task; and react
106                FSI activity was modulated by visual attention cues during feature-based learning.
107  achieved a key sleep function by correcting visual attention defects brought on by sleep deprivation
108 ic potential that durably improves resistant visual attention deficits after brain injury.
109 selectivity accounts for previously reported visual attention deficits in schizophrenia.
110                           This modulation of visual attention dependent on whether pedestrians are in
111             Previous studies have shown that visual attention depends on the phase of oscillatory bra
112                                    Selective visual attention describes the tendency of visual proces
113                                              Visual attention dramatically improves individuals' abil
114                                              Visual attention dramatically improves the perception of
115 determine whether the neuronal correlates of visual attention during neutral cueing are similarly int
116 r search behaviors and methods of allocating visual attention during polyp identification.
117                                              Visual attention enables an observer to select specific
118                                              Visual attention enables observers to select behaviorall
119                                    Selective visual attention enables organisms to enhance the repres
120                                              Visual attention enhances the responses of visual neuron
121 g/memory, auditory attention/working memory, visual attention/executive function, and speeded languag
122 d spatial behavior, including the control of visual attention, eye movements, and reaching.
123          To determine the role of vision and visual attention factors in automobile crash involvement
124  we trained monkeys to covertly deploy their visual attention from a central fixation point to one of
125 ich participants were required to move their visual attention from face or nonface central fixation s
126 g toddlers had more difficulties disengaging visual attention from faces than toddlers with ASD.
127   The pulvinar is an important structure for visual attention function.
128       This makes it impossible to discern if visual attention has an effect on value, or, instead, if
129                   Traditionally, research on visual attention has been focused on the processes invol
130                                              Visual attention has many effects on neural responses, p
131                      For this reason, infant visual attention has the potential to be a sensitive mea
132                                   Effects of visual attention have been observed in both microsaccade
133                     Although most studies of visual attention have examined the effects of shifting a
134                    Many studies of bottom-up visual attention have focused on identifying which featu
135                                   Studies of visual attention have implicated oscillatory activity in
136                        Recent experiments on visual attention have shown that this modulation can hav
137 rther elucidate the role of SC in endogenous visual attention, high-resolution fMRI was used to demon
138                                    Models of visual attention hold that top-down signals from frontal
139  cortex are similarly regulated by shifts in visual attention; however, the rules that govern whether
140                                              Visual attention improves perception for an attended loc
141                                     Top-down visual attention improves perception of selected stimuli
142 n primates during the flexible adjustment of visual attention in a reversal learning task.
143 results for the first time quantify atypical visual attention in ASD across multiple levels and categ
144    Here, we investigate neural correlates of visual attention in behaving honeybees (Apis mellifera).
145 re we propose neural signatures of selective visual attention in epidural recordings as a fast, relia
146 hat, to understand goal-directed behavior or visual attention in flies, it may be most informative to
147 ts establish changes in different aspects of visual attention in habitual video-game players as compa
148 roach and eye-tracking methodology to assess visual attention in human and macaque infants to faces n
149 us reports of occipital alpha reduction with visual attention in human EEG.
150 ts that the neuronal activity that underlies visual attention in humans is similar to that found in o
151 y used to study neural mechanisms supporting visual attention in humans.
152 lly reduced early preterm birth and improved visual attention in infancy in this sample, no consisten
153  to reduce high-risk pregnancies and improve visual attention in infants during the first year, only
154                                   Studies of visual attention in monkeys typically measure neuronal a
155 ally affects task-associated response during visual attention in patients and healthy controls.
156 developmental tests and specialized tests of visual attention in pilot trials of prenatal iodine supp
157 served significant and predictable biases in visual attention in response to both forms of stimulatio
158                                   A role for visual attention in reward-based decisions has previousl
159 ical measurements to study the deployment of visual attention in the brains of humans and nonhuman pr
160 gion for the endogenous control of selective visual attention in the human brain.
161 ously manipulated to control for the role of visual attention in the valuation computation.
162  are discussed within the scope of models of visual attention in which the pulvinar facilitates commu
163 omotor speed as well as indices of selective visual attention in young (mean = 26 years) or old (mean
164 l search paradigm, which is known to require visual attention, in this study the efficacy of the tech
165        The prevailing interpretation is that visual attention increases value.
166 g constructs including selective and divided visual attention, inhibitory control, flexibility, impul
167                                              Visual attention involves discrete multispectral oscilla
168                    The spatial topography of visual attention is a distinguishing and critical featur
169                 These data suggest that poor visual attention is a significant risk factor for bumpin
170 re, we ask if this cross-modal plasticity of visual attention is accompanied by an increase in the nu
171            Recent work has demonstrated that visual attention is allocated to stimulus features that
172                                              Visual attention is attracted by salient stimuli that 'p
173 g the preparation of saccadic eye movements, visual attention is confined to the target of intended f
174                                              Visual attention is controlled by activity in posterior
175                 The development of selective visual attention is critical for effectively engaging wi
176                                              Visual attention is generally important for resolving co
177                                              Visual attention is guided to stimuli either on the basi
178 iple stimuli, we show that the allocation of visual attention is influenced significantly by aversive
179                         Here we test whether visual attention is necessary to produce rivalry.
180                                              Visual attention is often understood as a modulatory fie
181 een demonstrated, but it remains unclear how visual attention is recruited during aversive learning,
182                    The development of infant visual attention is sensitive to thyroid hormone during
183    In the present study, we investigated how visual attention is shifted during such cuing paradigms
184                                              Visual attention is the mechanism the nervous system use
185                                              Visual attention is well-suited to constrain cortical mo
186                                              Visual attention is widely studied, yet the neural mecha
187 formation for online control was achieved by visual attention, its limited capacity [7] would substan
188           One of the puzzling aspects in the visual attention literature is the discrepancy between e
189      There is evidence from the object-based visual attention literature that the FVF may not process
190 educed resolution of spatial and/or temporal visual attention may underlie perceptual deficits relate
191                                              Visual attention mechanisms are known to select informat
192 al proposals that cholinergic enhancement of visual attention might operate via gamma oscillations in
193 imes) but decreased activation in the normal visual attention network (dorsal parietal, bilateral pre
194 rates that sPCS and iPCS fall within a broad visual-attention network, while tgPCS and cIFS fall with
195 pattern in two additional experiments: (i) a visual attention "oddball" task and (ii) a task-free res
196 nce interval 1.30 to 5.63) and impairment in visual attention (odds ratio 2.74; 95% confidence interv
197  visual reorientation behavior and amount of visual attention on individual ROIs in each scenario wer
198 er-surround selection mechanism that focuses visual attention on sensory stimuli also selectively mai
199 ty to motion inputs (e.g., through increased visual attention) or direct scaling of motor outputs (i.
200 ylcholine (ACh) is necessary exclusively for visual attention, or if it also contributes to attention
201  could not be explained by motion artifacts, visual attention, or signal quality differences.
202 s little change in intelligence quotient and visual attention over the study period, and children's e
203 03), and trends toward greater impairment on visual attention (P = 0.06) and working memory (P = 0.09
204                                          Our visual attention paradigm allowed us to investigate how
205                                     Although visual attention paradigms have been reported to activat
206 contrasts and parallels between auditory and visual attention pathways and mechanisms, the interplay
207                        Influential models of visual attention posit a distinction between top-down co
208                          Models of selective visual attention posit that these increases in activity
209                                    Models of visual attention postulate the existence of a bottom-up
210                                    Models of visual attention postulate the existence of a saliency m
211 optic radiations and neural synchrony during visual attention predict reaction time.
212 eriments, the computational requirements for visual attention processing are often not clearly presen
213 howing that affective sounds could influence visual attention provide evidence that we make use of af
214                                              Visual attention provides a means of selecting among the
215 rontal regions during auditory compared with visual attention, putatively reflecting suppression of v
216  a pattern of errors that suggested impaired visual attention rather than a deficiency in perseverati
217 ment of the thalamocortical network, and (2) visual attention reduces the magnitude of alpha oscillat
218 associated with reward automatically capture visual attention regardless of intention.
219 ous reports, we found that the cue attracted visual attention regardless of whether it was presented
220                                              Visual attention selects behaviorally relevant informati
221                                              Visual attention selects task-relevant information from
222            Individual differences in newborn visual attention significantly associated with individua
223 nd (8-12 Hz) EEG activity has been linked to visual attention since the earliest EEG studies.
224 cerns show atypicality in the development of visual attention skills from the first year of life.
225 thalamic structures strongly associated with visual attention, specifically the mediodorsal nucleus a
226 re observed in the absence of any changes to visual attention, speed of response, or general motivati
227             Analysis of passersby shows that visual attention spreads unevenly in space and that the
228  aims of this study were to (1) describe the visual attention strategies employed by surgeons that ar
229 m to examine if there are common patterns of visual attention strategies employed by surgeons which a
230       There are discernable and quantifiable visual attention strategies used by surgeons during lapa
231     Evidence for this phenomenon arises from visual attention studies (Worden et al., 2000); however,
232 ed two bilateral regions that are biased for visual attention, superior precentral sulcus (sPCS) and
233 e of attention, whereas auditory relative to visual attention suppressed mainly central visual field
234 -motor reaction time (Simple Reaction Time), visual attention (Symbol Digit Substitution), and learni
235 ions associated with the vertebrate 'active' visual attention system.
236                                Computational visual attention systems have been constructed in order
237                  A subgroup also completed a visual attention task (n = 35; phase 2b) and a brain MRI
238 gic agonist (physostigmine) during a spatial visual attention task in humans.
239 d 23 healthy comparison subjects performed a visual attention task in the presence or absence of dist
240 listened to these signals while performing a visual attention task of either low or high load.
241 ons in area MT in macaque visual cortex in a visual attention task via the strength of synchronizatio
242  or 3.0 mg/kg iv), were tested on a 3-choice visual attention task with an olfactory distractor prese
243 other cohort of DAT KD mice was trained on a visual attention task, and no deficits were observed, co
244 ale, and Cech reported that when tested on a visual attention task, the behavior of juvenile chimpanz
245 nd healthy controls while executing a simple visual attention task, we discovered that CBP patients,
246 om area V4 of two male macaques performing a visual attention task.
247 tention task and to dim checkerboards in the visual attention task.
248 group counterparts exhibited fewer errors in visual attention/task switching at age 9 years (effect s
249 elligence, attention, attention dysfunction, visual attention/task switching, working memory, and aca
250 y paraprofessionals exhibited improvement in visual attention/task switching.
251 with abnormalities in neural response during visual attention tasks in the presence of cross-modal no
252 rrent thermal stimulation (left forearm) and visual attention tasks of titrated difficulty in 20 heal
253   We observed that visual working memory and visual attention tasks robustly recruit cerebellar lobul
254          Each participant performed a set of visual attention tasks with increasing attentional load
255  seronegative [SN] controls) during a set of visual attention tasks with increasing levels of attenti
256  unsupplemented Ts65Dn mice on a series of 5 visual attention tasks, and in fact, on some tasks did n
257 ts display oscillatory brain activity during visual attention tasks, but it is unclear if neural osci
258  schizophrenia subjects' poor performance on visual attention tasks, therefore, is unknown.
259 ietal and occipital brain regions during the visual-attention tasks (all with P < or = 0.001, correct
260 ion-matched control subjects during a set of visual-attention tasks with graded levels of difficulty.
261 rightward shift in the spatial allocation of visual attention, temporarily mimicking spatial deficits
262 onal oscillations clearly appear integral to visual attention, the role of lower-frequency oscillatio
263      This review will examine two aspects of visual attention: the changes in neural responses within
264 (FEF) are known to represent the position of visual attention, their respective contributions to its
265 ases in affiliative behaviors--lip smacking, visual attention to a caregiver, and time in close proxi
266                   As a result, deployment of visual attention to a specific spatial location is deter
267 cially relevant, "affective" touch, and (ii) visual attention to emotional faces.
268 ng relevant visual signals but by allocating visual attention to such stimuli.
269 entromedial prefrontal cortex damage impairs visual attention to the eye regions of faces, particular
270 control in response to food cues and greater visual attention to the food cues.
271 he parent's look, extended their duration of visual attention to the object.
272                                    Directing visual attention toward a particular feature or location
273                           Covertly directing visual attention toward a spatial location in the absenc
274 with amygdala and fusiform gyrus to modulate visual attention toward motivationally relevant cues.
275                         Bundesen's theory of visual attention (TVA) offers a quantitative analysis of
276 ance was analyzed according to the theory of visual attention (TVA), which provides a computational f
277  parietal cortices to bottom-up and top-down visual attention using electrophysiological measures in
278      Previously, we measured fluctuations in visual attention using the responses of populations of s
279      Most computational analysis methods for visual attention utilize black-box algorithms which lack
280 gnitive load: verbal working memory (WM) and visual attention (VA) tasks.
281 ntagious behaviors, including propagation of visual attention, violence, opinions, and emotional stat
282 rmation, including visuo-spatial perception, visual attention, visuo-motor transformations and other
283 apture by stimuli that match WM content [7], visual attention was biased toward (task-irrelevant) sti
284                                              Visual attention was evaluated with the Useful Field of
285 ion of the interplay between WM contents and visual attention was mediated by a neuroanatomical netwo
286                     To investigate sustained visual attention, we assessed visuocortical alpha suppre
287 inhibition of PIVC is strongly influenced by visual attention, we here examined whether attention net
288 ent-related brain potential (ERP) markers of visual attention, we show that when two targets appear i
289 otential for acetylcholine to play a role in visual attention, we studied nicotinic acetylcholine rec
290                     The temporal dynamics of visual attention were measured using rapid serial visual
291                        Visual field loss and visual attention were not associated.
292 alyzed by Bundesen's computational theory of visual attention, were related to brain metabolism, meas
293   Healthy subjects tend to exhibit a bias of visual attention whereby left hemifield stimuli are proc
294                                              Visual attention, which improves perception of attended
295 arent paradox can be resolved by considering visual attention, which is known to enhance basic visual
296 visual cortex during periods of high and low visual attention while participants attended to either t
297 her the use of a sensitive measure of infant visual attention will increase the reliability of such s
298 nt of working memory with an n-back task and visual attention with a Posner cue-target task.
299          We suggest the assessment of infant visual attention, with follow-up examination of childhoo
300            We highlight the need to consider visual attention within sensory ecology and advocate the

 
Page Top