Illustration of the analysis rationale and hypotheses.
A) ROI analysis procedure. During an independent location localizer task (left) checkerboard cross patterns (flickering black and white at 4 HZ) were presented at the locations corresponding to the bar locations during the search task (right). Using BOLD activations in EVC from this localizer, location specific ROI masks were created for the four locations of interest (HPDL, two NL-near, NL-far). The masks were then applied to the additional singleton task and the contrast parameter estimates (BOLD) during search trials extracted in a stimulus and location specific manner. To illustrate, in the example above we assume that the HPDL was at the upper left location (red circle; determined by the statistical regularities throughout the search task). The example search trial contained a neutral stimulus at the HPDL (red circle), a salient distractor at the left NL-near (blue circle), a neutral stimulus at the right NL-near (dark blue circle) and a target stimulus at the NL-far (green circle) location. Therefore, the data provided by this trial was a neutral stimulus at HPDL (red arrow), a distractor at NL-near (blue arrow), a neutral stimulus at the other NL-near (not depicted), and a target at NL-far (not depicted). Therefore, each trial provided multiple location specific datapoints. Specifically, data for each stimulus type and location combination were first estimated across trials and then extracted using the ROI based approach. Data across the two NL-near locations were averaged. For further details see Materials and Methods: Statistical Analysis and Region of interest (ROI) definition. The same ROI analysis was performed for omission trials, except that by design, omission trials did not contain stimuli, hence resulting in only location specific activation data points. B) Potential outcomes for search trials. We distinguish between two factors modulating BOLD responses during search trials. First, we asked whether modulations in EVC are spatially specific. Illustrated on the left is a spatially unspecific modulation, affecting neural populations with receptive fields at all three locations equally. The middle panel depicts a spatially specific modulation with a gradient of increasing suppression the closer a location is to the HPDL. Second, we ask whether BOLD modulations are stimulus specific, that is selectively suppressing only distractor stimuli, but not target and neutral stimuli (right panel). C) Additionally, we distinguished between reactive compared to proactive spatial modulations by contrasting BOLD during omission trials. Reactive modulations (i.e., following search display onset) result in no spatially specific effects during omission trials (left panel), because no search display was shown. In contrast, proactive suppression yields spatially specific BOLD modulations during omission trials due to the deployment of spatial priority maps by anticipated search (right panel).