Harvard University.
J Cogn Neurosci. 1997 Jan;9(1):133-42. doi: 10.1162/jocn.1997.9.1.133.
Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to locate an area in human extrastriate cortex that subserves a specific component process of visual object recognition. Regional blood flow increased in a bilateral extrastriate area on the inferolateral surface of the brain near the border between the occipital and temporal lobes (and a smaller area in the right fusiform gyms) when subjects viewed line drawings of 3-dimensional objects compared to viewing scrambled drawings with no clear shape interpretation. Responses were Seen for both novel and familiar objects, implicating this area in the bottom-up (i.e., memory-independent) analysis of visual shape.
正电子发射断层扫描(PET)被用来定位人类外纹状皮层中的一个区域,该区域负责视觉物体识别的一个特定成分过程。当受试者观看三维物体的线条图而不是观看没有明确形状解释的混乱线条图时,大脑下外侧表面靠近枕叶和颞叶之间边界的双侧外纹状区(以及右侧梭状回的一个较小区域)的血流增加。对新颖和熟悉的物体都观察到了反应,这表明该区域参与了自下而上(即,与记忆无关)的视觉形状分析。