Revsine Cambria, Gonzalez-Castillo Javier, Merriam Elisha P, Bandettini Peter A, Ramírez Fernando M
Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
Department of Psychology, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL.
bioRxiv. 2023 Feb 8:2023.02.08.527219. doi: 10.1101/2023.02.08.527219.
Our ability to recognize faces regardless of viewpoint is a key property of the primate visual system. Traditional theories hold that facial viewpoint is represented by view-selective mechanisms at early visual processing stages and that representations become increasingly tolerant to viewpoint changes in higher-level visual areas. Newer theories, based on single-neuron monkey electrophysiological recordings, suggest an additional intermediate processing stage invariant to mirror-symmetric face views. Consistent with traditional theories, human studies combining neuroimaging and multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA) methods have provided evidence of view-selectivity in early visual cortex. However, contradictory results have been reported in higher-level visual areas concerning the existence in humans of mirror-symmetrically tuned representations. We believe these results reflect low-level stimulus confounds and data analysis choices. To probe for low-level confounds, we analyzed images from two popular face databases. Analyses of mean image luminance and contrast revealed biases across face views described by even polynomials-i.e., mirror-symmetric. To explain major trends across human neuroimaging studies of viewpoint selectivity, we constructed a network model that incorporates three biological constraints: cortical magnification, convergent feedforward projections, and interhemispheric connections. Given the identified low-level biases, we show that a gradual increase of interhemispheric connections across network layers is sufficient to replicate findings of mirror-symmetry in high-level processing stages, as well as view-tuning in early processing stages. Data analysis decisions-pattern dissimilarity measure and data recentering-accounted for the variable observation of mirror-symmetry in late processing stages. The model provides a unifying explanation of MVPA studies of viewpoint selectivity. We also show how common analysis choices can lead to erroneous conclusions.
无论从何种视角,我们识别面部的能力都是灵长类视觉系统的一个关键特性。传统理论认为,面部视角在早期视觉处理阶段由视角选择性机制来表征,并且在更高层次的视觉区域中,表征对视角变化的耐受性会越来越高。基于对猴子的单神经元电生理记录的更新理论表明,存在一个额外的中间处理阶段,对镜像对称的面部视图具有不变性。与传统理论一致,结合神经成像和多变量模式分析(MVPA)方法的人类研究已经提供了早期视觉皮层中视角选择性的证据。然而,在更高层次的视觉区域,关于人类是否存在镜像对称调谐表征的报道结果相互矛盾。我们认为这些结果反映了低层次刺激混淆和数据分析选择的问题。为了探究低层次混淆因素,我们分析了来自两个常用面部数据库的图像。对平均图像亮度和对比度的分析揭示了由偶多项式描述的面部视图偏差,即镜像对称偏差。为了解释人类视角选择性神经成像研究中的主要趋势,我们构建了一个包含三个生物学约束条件的网络模型:皮层放大率、汇聚的前馈投射和半球间连接。鉴于已确定的低层次偏差,我们表明,跨网络层的半球间连接逐渐增加足以在高层次处理阶段复制镜像对称的发现,以及在早期处理阶段复制视角调谐的发现。数据分析决策——模式差异度量和数据重新中心化——解释了后期处理阶段镜像对称的可变观察结果。该模型为视角选择性的MVPA研究提供了一个统一的解释。我们还展示了常见的分析选择如何导致错误的结论。