PsychologyThe Journal of Neuroscience
Selective Attention and Decision-Making Have Separable Neural Bases in Space and Time
D. Moerel, A. N. Rich, et al.
Research conducted by Denise Moerel, Anina N. Rich, and Alexandra Woolgar separates selective attention from decision-making using a two-stage task and multimodal neuroimaging. The study reveals attention boosts stimulus representations in early visual and frontoparietal regions before decisions begin, highlighting attention’s independent role in neural coding.
Related Publications
Explore these studies to deepen your understanding
Adjacent work that informs or extends this paper's methodology and findings.
Engineering and Technology
Artificial intelligence-based predictive maintenance, time-sensitive networking, and big data-driven algorithmic decision-making in the economics of Industrial Internet of Things
T. Kliestik, E. Nica, et al.
Psychology
Ventromedial prefrontal value signals and functional connectivity during decision-making in suicidal behavior and impulsivity
V. M. Brown, J. Wilson, et al.
Psychology
Neural and Computational Mechanisms of Motivation and Decision-making
D. M. Yee
Education
Institutional structure and governance capability in universities: an empirical study from the perspectives of time, space, and quantity dimensions
Z. Luo, M. Junfeng, et al.

