Eckstein Miguel P, Beutter Brent R, Pham Binh T, Shimozaki Steven S, Stone Leland S
Vision and Image Understanding Laboratory, Department of Psychology, University of California, Santa Barbara, California 93106, USA.
J Neurosci. 2007 Feb 7;27(6):1266-70. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3975-06.2007.
Are the body's actions and the mind's perceptions the result of shared neural processing, or are they performed largely independently? The brain has two major processing streams, and some have proposed that this division segregates visual processing for action and perception. The ventral pathway is claimed to support conscious experience (perception), whereas the dorsal pathway is claimed to support the control of movement (action). Others have argued that perception and action share much of their visual processing within the primate cortex. During visual search, the brain performs a sophisticated deployment of eye movements (saccadic actions) to gather information to subserve perceptual judgments. The relationship between the neural mechanisms mediating perception and action in visual search remains unexplored. Here, we investigate the visual representation of target information in the human brain, both for perceptual decisions and for saccadic actions during visual search. We use classification image analysis, a form of reverse correlation, to estimate the behavioral receptive fields of the visual mechanisms responsible for saccadic and perceptual responses during the same visual search task. Results show that the behavioral receptive fields mediating the perceptual decisions are indistinguishable from those driving the oculomotor decisions, suggesting that similar neural mechanisms are responsible for both perception and oculomotor action during search. Diverging target representations would result in an inefficient coupling between eye movement planning and perceptual judgments. Thus, a common target representation would be more optimal and might be expected to have evolved through natural selection in the neural systems responsible for visual search.
身体的行动和大脑的感知是共享神经处理的结果,还是在很大程度上独立进行的?大脑有两条主要的处理通路,有人提出这种划分将用于行动和感知的视觉处理区分开来。腹侧通路据称支持有意识的体验(感知),而背侧通路据称支持运动控制(行动)。其他人则认为,在灵长类动物皮层中,感知和行动共享许多视觉处理过程。在视觉搜索过程中,大脑会对眼球运动(扫视动作)进行复杂的部署,以收集信息来辅助感知判断。在视觉搜索中,介导感知和行动的神经机制之间的关系仍未得到探索。在这里,我们研究了人类大脑中目标信息的视觉表征,包括在视觉搜索过程中进行感知决策和扫视动作时的表征。我们使用分类图像分析(一种反向相关形式)来估计在同一视觉搜索任务中负责扫视和感知反应的视觉机制的行为感受野。结果表明,介导感知决策的行为感受野与驱动眼动决策的感受野没有区别,这表明在搜索过程中,相似的神经机制负责感知和眼动行动。不同的目标表征会导致眼动规划和感知判断之间的耦合效率低下。因此,一个共同的目标表征会更优,并且可能是通过负责视觉搜索的神经系统中的自然选择进化而来的。