Institute for Psychological Research, Leiden University, Wassenaarseweg 52, 2300 RB Leiden, The Netherlands.
Behav Brain Funct. 2008 Oct 22;4:50. doi: 10.1186/1744-9081-4-50.
The visual cortex of the human brain contains specialized modules for processing different visual features of an object. Confronted with multiple objects, the system needs to attribute the correct features to each object (often referred to as 'the binding problem'). The brain is assumed to integrate the features of perceived objects into object files - pointers to the neural representations of these features, which outlive the event they represent in order to maintain stable percepts of objects over time. It has been hypothesized that a new encounter with one of the previously bound features will reactivate the other features in the associated object file according to a kind of pattern-completion process.
Fourteen healthy volunteers participated in an fMRI experiment and performed a task designed to measure the aftereffects of binding visual features (houses, faces, motion direction). On each trial, participants viewed a particular combination of features (S1) before carrying out a speeded choice response to a second combination of features (S2). Repetition and alternation of all three features was varied orthogonally.
The behavioral results showed the standard partial repetition costs: a reaction time increase when one feature was repeated and the other feature alternated between S1 and S2, as compared to complete repetitions or alternations of these features. Importantly, the fMRI results provided evidence that repeating motion direction reactivated the object that previously moved in the same direction. More specifically, perceiving a face moving in the same direction as a just-perceived house increased activation in the parahippocampal place area (PPA). A similar reactivation effect was not observed for faces in the fusiform face area (FFA). Individual differences in the size of the reactivation effects in the PPA and FFA showed a positive correlation with the corresponding partial repetition costs.
Our study provides the first neural evidence that features are bound together on a single presentation and that reviewing one feature automatically reactivates the features that previously accompanied it.
人类大脑的视觉皮层包含专门用于处理物体不同视觉特征的模块。面对多个物体,系统需要将正确的特征分配给每个物体(通常称为“绑定问题”)。大脑被认为将感知到的物体的特征整合到对象文件中——指向这些特征的神经表示的指针,这些特征的寿命超过它们所代表的事件,以便随着时间的推移保持对物体的稳定感知。有人假设,与之前绑定的特征之一的新接触将根据一种模式完成过程重新激活相关对象文件中的其他特征。
14 名健康志愿者参与了 fMRI 实验,并执行了一项旨在测量视觉特征(房屋、面孔、运动方向)绑定后效的任务。在每次试验中,参与者先观看特定的特征组合(S1),然后快速做出对第二个特征组合(S2)的选择反应。所有三个特征的重复和交替都是正交变化的。
行为结果显示了标准的部分重复成本:当一个特征重复而另一个特征在 S1 和 S2 之间交替时,反应时间会增加,与这些特征的完全重复或交替相比。重要的是,fMRI 结果提供了证据表明,重复运动方向会重新激活之前以相同方向运动的物体。更具体地说,感知到一个与刚刚感知到的房屋运动方向相同的面孔会增加在旁海马区(PPA)中的激活。在梭状回面孔区(FFA)中没有观察到类似的再激活效应。PPA 和 FFA 中再激活效应的个体差异与相应的部分重复成本呈正相关。
我们的研究提供了第一个神经学证据,证明特征在单个呈现时被绑定在一起,并且查看一个特征会自动重新激活之前伴随它的特征。