Emberson Lauren L, Crosswhite Stephen L, Richards John E, Aslin Richard N
Princeton University, Princeton, New Jersey 08544,
University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627, and.
J Neurosci. 2017 Mar 29;37(13):3698-3703. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3300-16.2017. Epub 2017 Mar 6.
Understanding how the human visual system develops is crucial to understanding the nature and organization of our complex and varied visual representations. However, previous investigations of the development of the visual system using fMRI are primarily confined to a subset of the visual system (high-level vision: faces, scenes) and relatively late in visual development (starting at 4-5 years of age). The current study extends our understanding of human visual development by presenting the first systematic investigation of a mid-level visual region [the lateral occipital cortex (LOC)] in a population much younger than has been investigated in the past: 6 month olds. We use functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS), an emerging optical method for recording cortical hemodynamics, to perform neuroimaging with this very young population. Whereas previous fNIRS studies have suffered from imprecise neuroanatomical localization, we rely on the most rigorous MR coregistration of fNIRS data to date to image the infant LOC. We find surprising evidence that at 6 months the LOC has functional specialization that is highly similar to adults. Following Cant and Goodale (2007), we investigate whether the LOC tracks shape information and not other cues to object identity (e.g., texture/material). This finding extends evidence of LOC specialization from early childhood into infancy and earlier than developmental trajectories of high-level visual regions. Understanding visual development is crucial to understanding the nature of visual representations in the human brain. Previous studies of visual development have investigated children (4 years and older) and high-level visual areas. This study expands our knowledge of visual development by investigating the functional development of mid-level vision [lateral occipital cortex (LOC)] early in infancy. We find surprisingly adult-like functional specialization of the LOC by 6 months of age: infants exhibit shape selectivity, but not object selectivity, in this region.
了解人类视觉系统如何发育对于理解我们复杂多样的视觉表征的本质和组织至关重要。然而,以往使用功能磁共振成像(fMRI)对视觉系统发育的研究主要局限于视觉系统的一个子集(高级视觉:面孔、场景),且处于视觉发育相对较晚的阶段(从4 - 5岁开始)。本研究通过对一个比以往研究对象年龄小得多的群体(6个月大的婴儿)中的一个中级视觉区域[外侧枕叶皮层(LOC)]进行首次系统研究,扩展了我们对人类视觉发育的理解。我们使用功能近红外光谱技术(fNIRS),一种用于记录皮层血流动力学的新兴光学方法,对这个非常年幼的群体进行神经成像。以往的fNIRS研究存在神经解剖定位不精确的问题,而我们依靠迄今为止最严格的fNIRS数据与磁共振成像(MR)的配准来对婴儿的LOC进行成像。我们发现了令人惊讶的证据,即6个月大时LOC具有与成年人高度相似的功能特化。按照坎特和古德尔(2007年)的研究,我们探究LOC是否追踪形状信息而不是其他物体识别线索(例如纹理/材质)。这一发现将LOC特化的证据从幼儿期扩展到了婴儿期,且早于高级视觉区域的发育轨迹。理解视觉发育对于理解人类大脑中视觉表征的本质至关重要。以往关于视觉发育的研究调查的是儿童(4岁及以上)和高级视觉区域。本研究通过在婴儿早期调查中级视觉[外侧枕叶皮层(LOC)]的功能发育,扩展了我们对视觉发育知识的了解。我们发现到6个月大时LOC具有惊人的类似成人的功能特化:婴儿在该区域表现出形状选择性,但没有物体选择性。