Incentive motivation is believed to influence various cognitive domains to enhance goal-directed behaviour. For example the association of a reward to a specific location drives attention towards that location and influences the motor programmes involved in achieving that goal. However the interaction between motor and attentional systems in response to reward incentives is still poorly understood. To explore this we administered two Posner-style cueing tasks with varying reward incentives to two monkeys while recording neural activity from the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd), a key area for preparing goal-directed movements. These two cueing tasks differed in terms of motor engagement and visual analysis required: in Experiment 1 the animals manually reported the detection of a target stimulus in each trial, whereas in Experiment 2 the task followed a Go/NoGo paradigm, where the motor response depended on target identification. Behaviour revealed distinct patterns of attentional deployment and motor responses across the two tasks. Interestingly through time-resolved neural decoding we identified a stronger link between the reward incentives, motor activity and attentional shifts in Experiment 2. Overall our results suggest that motivation plays a critical role in modulating the interplay between spatial attention and motor control, with its effects varying based on the cognitive demands of the task.

Motivational sharpening of the interaction between spatial attention and motor control. Insights from the monkey dorsal premotor cortex / Di Bello, Fabio; Kirchherr, Sebastien; Ramawat, Surabhi; Bardella, Giampiero; Brunamonti, Emiliano; Pani, Pierpaolo; Ferraina, Stefano. - In: THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 0022-3751. - (2025), pp. 1-25. [10.1113/jp288774]

Motivational sharpening of the interaction between spatial attention and motor control. Insights from the monkey dorsal premotor cortex

Di Bello, Fabio
Primo
;
Kirchherr, Sebastien;Ramawat, Surabhi;Bardella, Giampiero;Brunamonti, Emiliano;Pani, Pierpaolo;Ferraina, Stefano
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

Incentive motivation is believed to influence various cognitive domains to enhance goal-directed behaviour. For example the association of a reward to a specific location drives attention towards that location and influences the motor programmes involved in achieving that goal. However the interaction between motor and attentional systems in response to reward incentives is still poorly understood. To explore this we administered two Posner-style cueing tasks with varying reward incentives to two monkeys while recording neural activity from the dorsal premotor cortex (PMd), a key area for preparing goal-directed movements. These two cueing tasks differed in terms of motor engagement and visual analysis required: in Experiment 1 the animals manually reported the detection of a target stimulus in each trial, whereas in Experiment 2 the task followed a Go/NoGo paradigm, where the motor response depended on target identification. Behaviour revealed distinct patterns of attentional deployment and motor responses across the two tasks. Interestingly through time-resolved neural decoding we identified a stronger link between the reward incentives, motor activity and attentional shifts in Experiment 2. Overall our results suggest that motivation plays a critical role in modulating the interplay between spatial attention and motor control, with its effects varying based on the cognitive demands of the task.
2025
dorsal premotor cortex; monkeys; motivation; reaching; reward; spatial attention
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Motivational sharpening of the interaction between spatial attention and motor control. Insights from the monkey dorsal premotor cortex / Di Bello, Fabio; Kirchherr, Sebastien; Ramawat, Surabhi; Bardella, Giampiero; Brunamonti, Emiliano; Pani, Pierpaolo; Ferraina, Stefano. - In: THE JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY. - ISSN 0022-3751. - (2025), pp. 1-25. [10.1113/jp288774]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1759357
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