Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration

<b>Background/Objectives:</b> Part-to-whole object completion and search guidance by salient, integrated objects has been proposed to require attentional resources, as shown by studies of neglect patients suffering from right-parietal brain damage. The current study was performed to prov...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Markus Conci, Leonie Nowack, Paul C. J. Taylor, Kathrin Finke, Hermann J. Müller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2025-05-01
Series:Brain Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/15/5/483
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1850257355760992256
author Markus Conci
Leonie Nowack
Paul C. J. Taylor
Kathrin Finke
Hermann J. Müller
author_facet Markus Conci
Leonie Nowack
Paul C. J. Taylor
Kathrin Finke
Hermann J. Müller
author_sort Markus Conci
collection DOAJ
description <b>Background/Objectives:</b> Part-to-whole object completion and search guidance by salient, integrated objects has been proposed to require attentional resources, as shown by studies of neglect patients suffering from right-parietal brain damage. The current study was performed to provide further causal evidence for the link between attention and object integration. <b>Methods:</b> Healthy observers detected targets in the left and/or right hemifields, and these targets were in turn embedded in various Kanizsa-type configurations that systematically varied in the extent to which individual items could be integrated into a complete, whole object. Moreover, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) was applied over the right intraparietal sulcus (IPS) and compared to both active and passive baseline conditions. <b>Results:</b> The results showed that target detection was substantially facilitated when the to-be detected item(s) were fully embedded in a salient, grouped Kanizsa figure, either a unilateral triangle or a bilateral diamond. However, object groupings in one hemifield did not facilitate target detection to the same extent when there were bilateral targets, one inside the (triangle) grouping and the other outside of the grouped object. These results extend previous findings from neglect patients. Moreover, a subgroup of observers was found to be particularly sensitive to IPS stimulation, revealing neglect-like extinction behavior with the single-hemifield triangle groupings and bilateral targets. Conversely, a second subgroup showed the opposite effect, namely an overall, IPS-dependent improvement in performance. <b>Conclusions:</b> These explorative analyses show that the parietal cortex, in particular IPS, seems to modulate the processing of object groupings by up- and downregulating the deployment of attention to spatial regions were to-be-grouped items necessitate attentional resources for object completion.
format Article
id doaj-art-c8856b79a42941b693ff8fa59896bd36
institution OA Journals
issn 2076-3425
language English
publishDate 2025-05-01
publisher MDPI AG
record_format Article
series Brain Sciences
spelling doaj-art-c8856b79a42941b693ff8fa59896bd362025-08-20T01:56:25ZengMDPI AGBrain Sciences2076-34252025-05-0115548310.3390/brainsci15050483Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object IntegrationMarkus Conci0Leonie Nowack1Paul C. J. Taylor2Kathrin Finke3Hermann J. Müller4Department of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, D-80802 Munich, GermanyDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, D-80802 Munich, GermanyDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, D-80802 Munich, GermanyDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, D-80802 Munich, GermanyDepartment of Psychology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, D-80802 Munich, Germany<b>Background/Objectives:</b> Part-to-whole object completion and search guidance by salient, integrated objects has been proposed to require attentional resources, as shown by studies of neglect patients suffering from right-parietal brain damage. The current study was performed to provide further causal evidence for the link between attention and object integration. <b>Methods:</b> Healthy observers detected targets in the left and/or right hemifields, and these targets were in turn embedded in various Kanizsa-type configurations that systematically varied in the extent to which individual items could be integrated into a complete, whole object. Moreover, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) was applied over the right intraparietal sulcus (IPS) and compared to both active and passive baseline conditions. <b>Results:</b> The results showed that target detection was substantially facilitated when the to-be detected item(s) were fully embedded in a salient, grouped Kanizsa figure, either a unilateral triangle or a bilateral diamond. However, object groupings in one hemifield did not facilitate target detection to the same extent when there were bilateral targets, one inside the (triangle) grouping and the other outside of the grouped object. These results extend previous findings from neglect patients. Moreover, a subgroup of observers was found to be particularly sensitive to IPS stimulation, revealing neglect-like extinction behavior with the single-hemifield triangle groupings and bilateral targets. Conversely, a second subgroup showed the opposite effect, namely an overall, IPS-dependent improvement in performance. <b>Conclusions:</b> These explorative analyses show that the parietal cortex, in particular IPS, seems to modulate the processing of object groupings by up- and downregulating the deployment of attention to spatial regions were to-be-grouped items necessitate attentional resources for object completion.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/15/5/483perceptual groupingobject integrationvisual attentionvisual extinctionrTMSintraparietal sulcus
spellingShingle Markus Conci
Leonie Nowack
Paul C. J. Taylor
Kathrin Finke
Hermann J. Müller
Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration
Brain Sciences
perceptual grouping
object integration
visual attention
visual extinction
rTMS
intraparietal sulcus
title Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration
title_full Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration
title_fullStr Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration
title_full_unstemmed Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration
title_short Right Parietal rTMS Induces Bidirectional Effects of Selective Attention upon Object Integration
title_sort right parietal rtms induces bidirectional effects of selective attention upon object integration
topic perceptual grouping
object integration
visual attention
visual extinction
rTMS
intraparietal sulcus
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3425/15/5/483
work_keys_str_mv AT markusconci rightparietalrtmsinducesbidirectionaleffectsofselectiveattentionuponobjectintegration
AT leonienowack rightparietalrtmsinducesbidirectionaleffectsofselectiveattentionuponobjectintegration
AT paulcjtaylor rightparietalrtmsinducesbidirectionaleffectsofselectiveattentionuponobjectintegration
AT kathrinfinke rightparietalrtmsinducesbidirectionaleffectsofselectiveattentionuponobjectintegration
AT hermannjmuller rightparietalrtmsinducesbidirectionaleffectsofselectiveattentionuponobjectintegration