No single electrophysiological marker for facilitation and inhibition of return: A review

Behav Brain Res. 2016 Mar 1:300:1-10. doi: 10.1016/j.bbr.2015.11.030. Epub 2015 Nov 28.

Abstract

Different electrophysiological components have been associated with behavioural facilitation and inhibition of return (IOR), although there is no consensus about which of these components are essential to the mechanism/s underlying the cueing effects. Different spatial attention hypotheses propound different roles for these components. In this review, we try and describe these inconsistencies by first presenting the electrophysiological component modulations of exogenous spatial attention as predicted by different attentional hypotheses. We then review and quantitatively analyze data from the existing electrophysiological studies trying to accommodate their findings. Variables such as the task at hand, the temporal properties and interactions between cues and targets, the presence/absence of intervening events, or stimuli arrangement in the visual field, might critically explain the discrepancies between the theoretical predictions and the electrophysiological modulations that both facilitation and IOR produce. We conclude that there is no single neural marker for facilitation and IOR because the behavioural effect that is observed depends on the contribution of several components: perceptual (P1), late-perceptual (N1, Nd), spatial selection (N2pc), and decision processes (P3). Many variables determine the electrophysiological modulations of different attentional orienting mechanisms, which jointly define the observed spatial cueing effects.

Keywords: Event-related potentials (ERPs); Exogenous orienting; Facilitation; Inhibition of return (IOR); Spatial attention.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Attention / physiology*
  • Brain / physiology*
  • Decision Making / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Inhibition, Psychological*
  • Space Perception / physiology*