Meyers Ethan M, Borzello Mia, Freiwald Winrich A, Tsao Doris
School of Cognitive Sciences, Hampshire College, Amherst, Massachusetts 01002, The Center for Brains, Minds and Machines, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139,
The Center for Brains, Minds and Machines, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02114.
J Neurosci. 2015 May 6;35(18):7069-81. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3086-14.2015.
Faces are a behaviorally important class of visual stimuli for primates. Recent work in macaque monkeys has identified six discrete face areas where most neurons have higher firing rates to images of faces compared with other objects (Tsao et al., 2006). While neurons in these areas appear to have different tuning (Freiwald and Tsao, 2010; Issa and DiCarlo, 2012), exactly what types of information and, consequently, which visual behaviors neural populations within each face area can support, is unknown. Here we use population decoding to better characterize three of these face patches (ML/MF, AL, and AM). We show that neural activity in all patches contains information that discriminates between the broad categories of face and nonface objects, individual faces, and nonface stimuli. Information is present in both high and lower firing rate regimes. However, there were significant differences between the patches, with the most anterior patch showing relatively weaker representation of nonface stimuli. Additionally, we find that pose-invariant face identity information increases as one moves to more anterior patches, while information about the orientation of the head decreases. Finally, we show that all the information we can extract from the population is present in patterns of activity across neurons, and there is relatively little information in the total activity of the population. These findings give new insight into the representations constructed by the face patch system and how they are successively transformed.
面部是灵长类动物行为上重要的一类视觉刺激。最近对猕猴的研究已经确定了六个离散的面部区域,与其他物体相比,这些区域中的大多数神经元对面部图像具有更高的放电率(Tsao等人,2006年)。虽然这些区域中的神经元似乎具有不同的调谐(Freiwald和Tsao,2010年;Issa和DiCarlo,2012年),但每个面部区域内的神经群体究竟能支持哪些类型的信息,以及相应地能支持哪些视觉行为,目前尚不清楚。在这里,我们使用群体解码来更好地表征其中三个面部斑块(ML/MF、AL和AM)。我们表明,所有斑块中的神经活动都包含区分面部和非面部物体、个体面部以及非面部刺激等宽泛类别的信息。在高放电率和低放电率状态下都存在信息。然而,斑块之间存在显著差异,最靠前的斑块对非面部刺激的表征相对较弱。此外,我们发现随着向更靠前的斑块移动,姿势不变的面部身份信息增加,而关于头部方向的信息减少。最后,我们表明我们从群体中能够提取的所有信息都存在于神经元活动模式中,而群体总活动中包含的信息相对较少。这些发现为面部斑块系统构建的表征以及它们如何被相继转换提供了新的见解。