Silson Edward Harry, Chan Annie Wai-Yiu, Reynolds Richard Craig, Kravitz Dwight Jacob, Baker Chris Ian
Laboratory of Brain and Cognition and
Laboratory of Brain and Cognition and Department of Neurology, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Memphis, Tennessee 38163, and.
J Neurosci. 2015 Aug 26;35(34):11921-35. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0137-15.2015.
In humans, there is a repeated category-selective organization across the lateral and ventral surfaces of the occipitotemporal cortex. This apparent redundancy is often explained as a feedforward hierarchy, with processing within lateral areas preceding the processing within ventral areas. Here, we tested the alternative hypothesis that this structure better reflects distinct high-level representations of the upper (ventral surface) and lower (lateral surface) contralateral quadrants of the visual field, consistent with anatomical projections from early visual areas to these surfaces in monkey. Using complex natural scenes, we provide converging evidence from three independent functional imaging and behavioral studies. First, population receptive field mapping revealed strong biases for the contralateral upper and lower quadrant within the ventral and lateral scene-selective regions, respectively. Second, these same biases were observed in the position information available both in the magnitude and multivoxel response across these areas. Third, behavioral judgments of a scene property strongly represented within the ventral scene-selective area (open/closed), but not another equally salient property (manmade/natural), were more accurate in the upper than the lower field. Such differential representation of visual space poses a substantial challenge to the idea of a strictly hierarchical organization between lateral and ventral scene-selective regions. Moreover, such retinotopic biases seem to extend beyond these regions throughout both surfaces. Thus, the large-scale organization of high-level extrastriate cortex likely reflects the need for both specialized representations of particular categories and constraints from the structure of early vision.
One of the most striking findings in fMRI has been the presence of matched category-selective regions on the lateral and ventral surfaces of human occipitotemporal cortex. Here, we focus on scene-selective regions and provide converging evidence for a retinotopic explanation of this organization. Specifically, we demonstrate that scene-selective regions exhibit strong biases for different portions of the visual field, with the lateral region representing the contralateral lower visual field and the ventral region the contralateral upper visual field. These biases are consistent with the retinotopy found in the early visual areas that lie directly antecedent to category-selective areas on both surfaces. Furthermore, these biases extend beyond scene-selective cortex and provide a retinotopic basis for the large-scale organization of occipitotemporal cortex.
在人类中,枕颞叶皮质的外侧和腹侧表面存在重复的类别选择性组织。这种明显的冗余通常被解释为一种前馈层次结构,外侧区域的处理先于腹侧区域的处理。在这里,我们检验了另一种假设,即这种结构更好地反映了视野中对侧上象限(腹侧表面)和下象限(外侧表面)的不同高级表征,这与猴子早期视觉区域到这些表面的解剖投射一致。使用复杂的自然场景,我们从三项独立的功能成像和行为研究中提供了趋同的证据。首先,群体感受野映射显示,在腹侧和外侧场景选择性区域内,分别对视野对侧的上象限和下象限存在强烈偏好。其次,在这些区域的幅度和多体素反应中可用的位置信息中也观察到了相同的偏好。第三,在腹侧场景选择性区域中强烈表征的场景属性(开放/封闭)的行为判断,而不是另一个同样显著的属性(人造/自然),在上视野比下视野中更准确。视觉空间的这种差异表征对外侧和腹侧场景选择性区域之间严格层次组织的观点提出了重大挑战。此外,这种视网膜拓扑偏好似乎在整个两个表面超出了这些区域。因此,高级纹外皮层的大规模组织可能反映了对特定类别的专门表征的需求以及早期视觉结构的限制。
功能磁共振成像中最引人注目的发现之一是人类枕颞叶皮质外侧和腹侧表面存在匹配的类别选择性区域。在这里,我们专注于场景选择性区域,并为这种组织的视网膜拓扑解释提供趋同的证据。具体而言,我们证明场景选择性区域对视野的不同部分表现出强烈偏好,外侧区域代表对侧下视野,腹侧区域代表对侧上视野。这些偏好与在两个表面上直接先于类别选择性区域的早期视觉区域中发现的视网膜拓扑一致。此外,这些偏好超出了场景选择性皮层,并为枕颞叶皮质的大规模组织提供了视网膜拓扑基础。