Fabbri Sara, Stubbs Kevin M, Cusack Rhodri, Culham Jody C
The Brain and Mind Institute, Department of Psychology, and Radboud University, Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition, and Behaviour, Nijmegen, 6500 HE Nijmegen, The Netherlands, and
The Brain and Mind Institute.
J Neurosci. 2016 Jul 20;36(29):7648-62. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0313-16.2016.
The properties of objects, such as shape, influence the way we grasp them. To quantify the role of different brain regions during grasping, it is necessary to disentangle the processing of visual dimensions related to object properties from the motor aspects related to the specific hand configuration. We orthogonally varied object properties (shape, size, and elongation) and task (passive viewing, precision grip with two or five digits, or coarse grip with five digits) and used representational similarity analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging data to infer the representation of object properties and hand configuration in the human brain. We found that object elongation is the most strongly represented object feature during grasping and is coded preferentially in the primary visual cortex as well as the anterior and posterior superior-parieto-occipital cortex. By contrast, primary somatosensory, motor, and ventral premotor cortices coded preferentially the number of digits while ventral-stream and dorsal-stream regions coded a mix of visual and motor dimensions. The representation of object features varied with task modality, as object elongation was less relevant during passive viewing than grasping. To summarize, this study shows that elongation is a particularly relevant property of the object to grasp, which along with the number of digits used, is represented within both ventral-stream and parietal regions, suggesting that communication between the two streams about these specific visual and motor dimensions might be relevant to the execution of efficient grasping actions.
To grasp something, the visual properties of an object guide preshaping of the hand into the appropriate configuration. Different grips can be used, and different objects require different hand configurations. However, in natural actions, grip and object type are often confounded, and the few experiments that have attempted to separate them have produced conflicting results. As such, it is unclear how visual and motor properties are represented across brain regions during grasping. Here we orthogonally manipulated object properties and grip, and revealed the visual dimension (object elongation) and the motor dimension (number of digits) that are more strongly coded in ventral and dorsal streams. These results suggest that both streams play a role in the visuomotor coding essential for grasping.
物体的属性,如形状,会影响我们抓取它们的方式。为了量化抓取过程中不同脑区的作用,有必要将与物体属性相关的视觉维度处理与与特定手部构型相关的运动方面区分开来。我们正交改变物体属性(形状、大小和长宽比)和任务(被动观看、用两指或五指进行精确抓握、或用五指进行粗略抓握),并使用功能磁共振成像数据的表征相似性分析来推断物体属性和手部构型在人脑中的表征。我们发现,物体长宽比是抓取过程中表征最强烈的物体特征,并且优先在初级视觉皮层以及前后上顶枕叶皮层中编码。相比之下,初级体感皮层、运动皮层和腹侧运动前皮层优先编码手指数量,而腹侧流和背侧流区域编码视觉和运动维度的混合信息。物体特征的表征随任务模式而变化,因为在被动观看期间物体长宽比的相关性低于抓取过程。总之,本研究表明,长宽比是抓取物体时特别相关的属性,它与使用的手指数量一起,在腹侧流和顶叶区域中都有表征,这表明这两个流之间关于这些特定视觉和运动维度的交流可能与高效抓取动作的执行相关。
为了抓取某物,物体的视觉属性会引导手部预成型为适当的构型。可以使用不同的抓握方式,不同的物体需要不同的手部构型。然而,在自然动作中,抓握方式和物体类型常常相互混淆,并且少数试图将它们分开的实验产生了相互矛盾的结果。因此,目前尚不清楚在抓取过程中视觉和运动属性如何在不同脑区中进行表征。在这里,我们正交操纵物体属性和抓握方式,并揭示了在腹侧流和背侧流中编码更强的视觉维度(物体长宽比)和运动维度(手指数量)。这些结果表明,这两个流在抓取所需的视觉运动编码中都发挥作用。