Kourtzi Zoe, Erb Michael, Grodd Wolfgang, Bülthoff Heinrich H
Max Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics and University Clinics, Tübingen, Germany.
Cereb Cortex. 2003 Sep;13(9):911-20. doi: 10.1093/cercor/13.9.911.
We used human functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to test whether the human lateral occipital complex (LOC), an area known to be involved in the analysis of visual shape, represents the perceived 3-D shape of objects or simply their 2-D contours. We employed an fMRI adaptation paradigm, in which repeated presentation of a stimulus results in decreased responses compared to responses to different stimuli. We found adaptation in the LOC for images of objects with the same perceived 3-D shape structure but different 2-D contours that resulted from small rotations of the objects in the frontal plane or in depth. However, no adaptation was observed in the LOC for images of objects that had the same 2-D contours but differed in their perceived 3-D shape; namely, 2-D silhouettes versus 3-D shaded images of objects, or convex versus concave objects. Differences in the fMRI adaptation responses across subregions in the LOC suggest that different neural populations in the LOC may mediate different mechanisms for the processing of object features.
我们使用人类功能磁共振成像(fMRI)来测试人类枕外侧复合体(LOC),一个已知参与视觉形状分析的区域,是代表物体的感知三维形状还是仅仅代表其二维轮廓。我们采用了fMRI适应范式,即与对不同刺激的反应相比,重复呈现刺激会导致反应减少。我们发现,对于具有相同感知三维形状结构但二维轮廓不同的物体图像,LOC出现了适应现象,这些不同的二维轮廓是由物体在额平面或深度上的小旋转产生的。然而,对于具有相同二维轮廓但感知三维形状不同的物体图像,LOC中未观察到适应现象;即物体的二维剪影与三维阴影图像,或凸面物体与凹面物体。LOC各子区域fMRI适应反应的差异表明,LOC中不同的神经群体可能介导了处理物体特征的不同机制。