Elsevier

NeuroImage

Volume 14, Issue 1, July 2001, Pages S76-S84
NeuroImage

Regular Article
On the Functional Neuroanatomy of Intrinsic and Phasic Alertness

https://doi.org/10.1006/nimg.2001.0839Get rights and content

Abstract

Intrinsic and phasic alertness are the most basic aspects of attention intensity probably constituting the basis for the more complex and capacity-demanding aspects of attention selectivity. Intrinsic alertness represents the cognitive control of wakefulness and arousal and is typically assessed by simple reaction time tasks without a preceding warning stimulus. Phasic alertness, in contrast, is called for in reaction time tasks in which a warning stimulus precedes the target, and it represents the ability to increase response readiness subsequent to external cueing. We report PET and fMRI data from both the literature and our own experiments to delineate the cortical and subcortical networks subserving alertness, sustained attention (as another aspect of attention intensity), and spatial orienting of attention. Irrespective of stimulus modality, there seems to exist a mostly right-hemispheric frontal, parietal, thalamic, and brain-stem network which is coactivated by alerting and orienting attentional demands. These findings corroborate both the hypothesis of a frontal modulation of brain-stem activation probably via the reticular nucleus of the thalamus and of a coactivation of the posterior attention system involved in spatial orienting by the anterior alerting network. Under conditions of phasic alertness there are additional activations of left-hemisphere frontal and parietal structures which are interpreted as basal aspects of attention selectivity rather than additional features of alerting.

References (46)

  • A. Tartaglione et al.

    Simple reaction time changes in patients with unilateral brain damage

    Neuropsychologia

    (1986)
  • C.D. Yingling et al.

    Regulation of unit activity in nucleus reticularis thalami by the mesencephalic reticular formation and the frontal granular cortex

    EEG Clin. Neurophysiol.

    (1975)
  • B. Achten et al.

    A functional MRI study of covert and overt orienting of attention

    Neural Plasticity

    (1999)
  • G. Aston-Jones et al.

    Anatomy and physiology of locus coeruleus neurons: Functional implications

  • C.S. Carter et al.

    The contribution of the anterior cingulate cortex to executive processes in cognition

    Rev. Neurosci.

    (1999)
  • R.M. Cohen et al.

    Functional localization of sustained attention

    Neuropsychiatry Neuropsychol. Behav. Neurol.

    (1988)
  • J.T. Coull et al.

    The neural correlates of the noradrenergic modulation of human attention, arousal and learning

    Eur. J. Neurosci.

    (1997)
  • H.L. Dee et al.

    Speed of decision-making processes in patients with unilateral cerebral disease

    Arch. Neurol.

    (1973)
  • K.J. Friston et al.

    Spatial registration and normalization of images

    Hum. Brain Mapp.

    (1995)
  • K.J. Friston et al.

    Statistical parametric mapping in functional imaging: A general linear approach

    Hum. Brain Mapp.

    (1995)
  • D. Howes et al.

    Simple reaction time: Evidence for focal impairments from lesions of the right hemisphere

    Brain

    (1975)
  • S. Kinomura et al.

    Activation by attention of the human reticular formation and thalamic intralaminar nuclei

    Science

    (1996)
  • Cited by (0)

    1

    To whom correspondence and reprint requests should be addressed at Neurological Clinic, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, D-52074 Aachen, Germany. Fax: ++49 241 8888 444. E-mail: [email protected].

    View full text