Marchette Steven A, Vass Lindsay K, Ryan Jack, Epstein Russell A
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104.
J Neurosci. 2015 Nov 4;35(44):14896-908. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2270-15.2015.
The use of landmarks is central to many navigational strategies. Here we use multivoxel pattern analysis of fMRI data to understand how landmarks are coded in the human brain. Subjects were scanned while viewing the interiors and exteriors of campus buildings. Despite their visual dissimilarity, interiors and exteriors corresponding to the same building elicited similar activity patterns in the parahippocampal place area (PPA), retrosplenial complex (RSC), and occipital place area (OPA), three regions known to respond strongly to scenes and buildings. Generalization across stimuli depended on knowing the correspondences among them in the PPA but not in the other two regions, suggesting that the PPA is the key region involved in learning the different perceptual instantiations of a landmark. In contrast, generalization depended on the ability to freely retrieve information from memory in RSC, and it did not depend on familiarity or cognitive task in OPA. Together, these results suggest a tripartite division of labor, whereby PPA codes landmark identity, RSC retrieves spatial or conceptual information associated with landmarks, and OPA processes visual features that are important for landmark recognition.
A central element of spatial navigation is the ability to recognize the landmarks that mark different places in the world. However, little is known about how the brain performs this function. Here we show that the parahippocampal place area (PPA), a region in human occipitotemporal cortex, exhibits key features of a landmark recognition mechanism. Specifically, the PPA treats different perceptual instantiations of the same landmark as representationally similar, but only when subjects have enough experience to know the correspondences among the stimuli. We also identify two other brain regions that exhibit landmark generalization, but with less sensitivity to familiarity. These results elucidate the brain networks involved in the learning and recognition of navigational landmarks.
地标物的使用是许多导航策略的核心。在此,我们使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据的多体素模式分析来了解地标物在人脑中是如何编码的。在受试者观看校园建筑的内部和外部时对其进行扫描。尽管内部和外部在视觉上并不相似,但对应于同一建筑的内部和外部在海马旁回位置区(PPA)、压后皮质复合体(RSC)和枕叶位置区(OPA)引发了相似的活动模式,这三个区域已知对场景和建筑有强烈反应。跨刺激的泛化取决于在PPA中知晓它们之间的对应关系,而在其他两个区域则不然,这表明PPA是参与学习地标物不同感知实例的关键区域。相比之下,泛化取决于在RSC中从记忆中自由检索信息的能力,并且它不取决于OPA中的熟悉程度或认知任务。总之,这些结果表明了一种三方分工,即PPA编码地标物身份,RSC检索与地标物相关的空间或概念信息,而OPA处理对于地标物识别很重要的视觉特征。
空间导航的一个核心要素是识别标志世界中不同地点的地标物的能力。然而,对于大脑如何执行此功能知之甚少。在此我们表明,人类枕颞叶皮质中的一个区域——海马旁回位置区(PPA),展现出地标物识别机制的关键特征。具体而言,PPA将同一地标物的不同感知实例视为在表征上相似,但仅当受试者有足够经验知晓刺激之间的对应关系时才如此。我们还识别出另外两个表现出地标物泛化的脑区,但对熟悉程度的敏感性较低。这些结果阐明了参与导航地标物学习和识别的脑网络。