scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

In the Zone or Zoning Out? Tracking Behavioral and Neural Fluctuations During Sustained Attention

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
A novel task is introduced, along with innovative analysis procedures that probe the relationships between reaction time (RT) variability, attention lapses, and intrinsic brain activity, and represent an important step forward in linking intrinsicbrain activity to behavioral phenomena.
Abstract
Despite growing recognition that attention fluctuates from moment-to-moment during sustained performance, prevailing analysis strategies involve averaging data across multiple trials or time points, treating these fluctuations as noise. Here, using alternative approaches, we clarify the relationship between ongoing brain activity and performance fluctuations during sustained attention. We introduce a novel task (the gradual onset continuous performance task), along with innovative analysis procedures that probe the relationships between reaction time (RT) variability, attention lapses, and intrinsic brain activity. Our results highlight 2 attentional states-a stable, less error-prone state ("in the zone"), characterized by higher default mode network (DMN) activity but during which subjects are at risk of erring if DMN activity rises beyond intermediate levels, and a more effortful mode of processing ("out of the zone"), that is less optimal for sustained performance and relies on activity in dorsal attention network (DAN) regions. These findings motivate a new view of DMN and DAN functioning capable of integrating seemingly disparate reports of their role in goal-directed behavior. Further, they hold potential to reconcile conflicting theories of sustained attention, and represent an important step forward in linking intrinsic brain activity to behavioral phenomena.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Disposed to distraction: Genetic variation in the cholinergic system influences distractibility but not time-on-task effects

TL;DR: Results are the first to demonstrate a specific impairment in cognitive control associated with the Ile89Val polymorphism and add to behavioral and cognitive neuroscience studies indicating the cholinergic system's critical role in overcoming distraction.
Journal ArticleDOI

Monitoring Alpha Oscillations and Pupil Dilation across a Performance-Intensity Function.

TL;DR: The results of this study suggest that these measures may encode different processes involved in speech perception, which show similar trends for highly intelligible speech, but diverge for more spectrally degraded speech.
Journal ArticleDOI

A functional connectivity-based neuromarker of sustained attention generalizes to predict recall in a reading task.

TL;DR: A previously defined whole‐brain FC network – a marker of attention that was derived from a sustained attention task – was used to predict the ability of participants to recall material during a free‐viewing reading task to find a new FC network whose strength specifically predicts reading recall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Intrinsic functional connectivity predicts individual differences in distractibility.

TL;DR: Predicting an individual's task performance using multivariate support vector regression models composed of resting state connectivity between regions of the DAN, VAN, and DMN, and a leave-one-subject-out cross-validation procedure suggests that greater integrity and independence of the DMN is related to better attentional ability.
Journal ArticleDOI

Memory failure predicted by attention lapsing and media multitasking.

TL;DR: It is shown that tonic lapses in attention in the moment before remembering were correlated with reductions in neural signals of goal coding and memory, along with behavioural forgetting, and heavier media multitasking is associated with a propensity to have attention lapses and forget.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Improved assessment of significant activation in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) : use of a cluster-size threshold

TL;DR: In this article, an alternative approach, which relies on the assumption that areas of true neural activity will tend to stimulate signal changes over contiguous pixels, is presented, which can improve statistical power by as much as fivefold over techniques that rely solely on adjusting per pixel false positive probabilities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wandering Minds: The Default Network and Stimulus-Independent Thought

TL;DR: It was demonstrated that mind-wandering is associated with activity in a default network of cortical regions that are active when the brain is “at rest” and individuals' reports of the tendency of their minds to wander were correlated with activity on this network.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-projection and the brain

TL;DR: It is speculated that envisioning the future (prospection), remembering the past, conceiving the viewpoint of others (theory of mind), and possibly some forms of navigation reflect the workings of the same core brain network.
Journal ArticleDOI

'Oops!': performance correlates of everyday attentional failures in traumatic brain injured and normal subjects

TL;DR: It is shown that errors on the SART can be predicted by a significant shortening of reaction times in the immediately preceding responses, supporting the view that these errors are a result of 'drift' of controlled processing into automatic responding consequent on impaired sustained attention to task.
Related Papers (5)