Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento, 38068, Rovereto, TN, Italy; Department of Education and Psychology, Freie Universität Berlin, 14195, Berlin-Dahlem, Germany.
Center for Mind/Brain Sciences, University of Trento, 38068, Rovereto, TN, Italy; Donders Institute for Brain, Cognition and Behaviour, Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Neuroimage. 2018 Apr 1;169:334-341. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2017.12.065. Epub 2017 Dec 22.
To optimize processing, the human visual system utilizes regularities present in naturalistic visual input. One of these regularities is the relative position of objects in a scene (e.g., a sofa in front of a television), with behavioral research showing that regularly positioned objects are easier to perceive and to remember. Here we use fMRI to test how positional regularities are encoded in the visual system. Participants viewed pairs of objects that formed minimalistic two-object scenes (e.g., a "living room" consisting of a sofa and television) presented in their regularly experienced spatial arrangement or in an irregular arrangement (with interchanged positions). Additionally, single objects were presented centrally and in isolation. Multi-voxel activity patterns evoked by the object pairs were modeled as the average of the response patterns evoked by the two single objects forming the pair. In two experiments, this approximation in object-selective cortex was significantly less accurate for the regularly than the irregularly positioned pairs, indicating integration of individual object representations. More detailed analysis revealed a transition from independent to integrative coding along the posterior-anterior axis of the visual cortex, with the independent component (but not the integrative component) being almost perfectly predicted by object selectivity across the visual hierarchy. These results reveal a transitional stage between individual object and multi-object coding in visual cortex, providing a possible neural correlate of efficient processing of regularly positioned objects in natural scenes.
为了优化处理,人类视觉系统利用自然视觉输入中的规律。其中一个规律是场景中物体的相对位置(例如,沙发在电视机前),行为研究表明,规则排列的物体更容易被感知和记住。在这里,我们使用 fMRI 来测试位置规律在视觉系统中是如何编码的。参与者观看了由两个物体组成的极简主义的两物体场景(例如,由沙发和电视组成的“客厅”),这些场景以其常规的空间排列或不规则的排列(位置交换)呈现。此外,还单独呈现了单个物体。将物体对诱发的多体素活动模式建模为形成对的两个单个物体的响应模式的平均值。在两个实验中,对于规则排列的物体对,这种在对象选择性皮层中的近似值明显不如不规则排列的物体对准确,这表明对个体物体表示的整合。更详细的分析显示,在视觉皮层的后-前轴上,从独立编码到整合编码的转变,独立成分(而不是整合成分)几乎可以通过整个视觉层次结构中的物体选择性来完美预测。这些结果揭示了视觉皮层中个体物体和多物体编码之间的过渡阶段,为自然场景中规则排列的物体的有效处理提供了可能的神经相关性。