Cauchoix Maxime, Crouzet Sébastien M, Fize Denis, Serre Thomas
Institute for Advanced Studies in Toulouse, France; Centre de Recherche Cerveau et Cognition, Université Paul Sabatier, Université de Toulouse, Toulouse, France; Faculté de Médecine de Purpan, CNRS, UMR 5549, Toulouse, France.
Centre de Recherche Cerveau et Cognition, Université Paul Sabatier, Université de Toulouse, Toulouse, France; Faculté de Médecine de Purpan, CNRS, UMR 5549, Toulouse, France; Cognitive, Linguistic and Psychological Sciences Department, Institute for Brain Sciences, Brown University, USA.
Neuroimage. 2016 Jan 15;125:280-290. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2015.10.012. Epub 2015 Oct 20.
Primates can recognize objects embedded in complex natural scenes in a glimpse. Rapid categorization paradigms have been extensively used to study our core perceptual abilities when the visual system is forced to operate under strong time constraints. However, the neural underpinning of rapid categorization remains to be understood, and the incredible speed of sight has yet to be reconciled with modern ventral stream cortical theories of object recognition. Here we recorded multichannel subdural electrocorticogram (ECoG) signals from intermediate areas (V4/PIT) of the ventral stream of the visual cortex while monkeys were actively engaged in a rapid animal/non-animal categorization task. A traditional event-related potential (ERP) analysis revealed short visual latencies (<50-70ms) followed by a rapidly developing visual selectivity (within ~20-30ms) for most electrodes. A multi-variate pattern analysis (MVPA) technique further confirmed that reliable animal/non-animal category information was possible from this initial ventral stream neural activity (within ~90-100ms). Furthermore, this early category-selective neural activity was (a) unaffected by the presentation of a backward (pattern) mask, (b) generalized to novel (unfamiliar) stimuli and (c) co-varied with behavioral responses (both accuracy and reaction times). Despite the strong prevalence of task-related information on the neural signal, task-irrelevant visual information could still be decoded independently of monkey behavior. Monkey behavioral responses were also found to correlate significantly with human behavioral responses for the same set of stimuli. Together, the present study establishes that rapid ventral stream neural activity induces a visually selective signal subsequently used to drive rapid visual categorization and that this visual strategy may be shared between human and non-human primates.
灵长类动物能在一瞥之间识别出复杂自然场景中嵌入的物体。当视觉系统被迫在严格的时间限制下运作时,快速分类范式已被广泛用于研究我们的核心感知能力。然而,快速分类的神经基础仍有待了解,而且惊人的视觉速度尚未与现代腹侧流皮层物体识别理论相协调。在这里,我们记录了猴子在积极参与快速动物/非动物分类任务时,视觉皮层腹侧流中间区域(V4/PIT)的多通道硬膜下脑电图(ECoG)信号。传统的事件相关电位(ERP)分析显示,大多数电极的视觉潜伏期较短(<50-70毫秒),随后是快速发展的视觉选择性(约20-30毫秒内)。多变量模式分析(MVPA)技术进一步证实,从腹侧流的这一初始神经活动(约90-100毫秒内)中可以获得可靠的动物/非动物类别信息。此外,这种早期的类别选择性神经活动(a)不受反向(图案)掩蔽呈现的影响,(b)可推广到新的(不熟悉的)刺激,并且(c)与行为反应(准确性和反应时间)共同变化。尽管神经信号中与任务相关的信息占主导地位,但与任务无关的视觉信息仍可独立于猴子行为进行解码。还发现猴子的行为反应与人类对同一组刺激的行为反应显著相关。总之,本研究表明,腹侧流的快速神经活动会诱发一种视觉选择性信号,随后用于驱动快速视觉分类,并且这种视觉策略可能在人类和非人类灵长类动物之间共享。