The present study focuses on the question of whether inter-
and intramodal forms of attention are reflected in activation
of the same or different brain areas. ERPs were recorded while
subjects were presented a random sequence of visual and auditory
stimuli. They were instructed to attend to nonspatial attributes
of either auditory or visual stimuli and to detect occasional
target stimuli within the attended channel. An occipital selection
negativity was found for intramodal attention to visual stimuli.
Visual intermodal attention was also manifested in a similar
negativity. A symmetrical dipole pair in the medial inferior
occipital areas could account for the intramodal effects. Dipole
pairs for the intermodal attention effect had a slightly more
posterior location compared to the dipole pair for the intramodal
effect. Auditory intermodal attention was manifested in an early
enhanced negativity overlapping with the N1 and P2 components,
which was localized using a symmetrical dipole pair in the lateral
auditory cortex. The onset of the intramodal attention effect
was somewhat later (around 200 ms), and was reflected in a frontal
processing negativity. The present results indicate that intra-
and intermodal forms of attention were indeed similar for visual
stimuli. Auditory data suggest the involvement of multiple brain
areas.