Valério Daniela, Peres André, Bergström Fredrik, Seidel Philipp, Almeida Jorge
Université Paris Saclay, INSERM, CEA, Cognitive Neuroimaging Unit, NeuroSpin Center, Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
Collège de France, PSL University, Paris, France.
Imaging Neurosci (Camb). 2025 Feb 18;3. doi: 10.1162/imag_a_00482. eCollection 2025.
In our daily activities, we encounter numerous objects that we successfully distinguish and recognize within a fraction of a second. This holds for coarse distinctions (e.g., cat vs. hammer) but also for more challenging distinctions that require fine-grain analysis (e.g., cat vs. dog). The efficiency of this recognition depends on how the brain organizes object-related information. While several attempts have focused on unraveling large-scale organization principles, research on fine-grained knowledge organization is rather limited. Here, we explored the fine-grain organization of object knowledge and investigated whether manipulable objects are organized and represented in terms of their similarity. To accomplish this, different groups of individuals participated in a behavioral and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) release from adaptation experiment. Adaptation was induced by presenting different exemplars of a particular object, and release from adaptation was elicited by the presentation of a deviant object. The relationship between adaptation and deviant objects was manipulated into four levels of similarity, measured by feature overlap between these objects. Our findings revealed that increasing object similarity provoked slower reaction times and weaker fMRI release from adaptation. Specifically, we identified similarity-driven tuning curves for the release from adaptation in the medial fusiform, collateral sulcus, parahippocampal gyri, lingual gyri, lateral occipital complex, and occipito-parietal cortex. These results suggest that the processing and representation of objects in the brain and our ability to perform fine discriminations between objects reflect real-world object similarity in a relatively parametric manner.
在我们的日常活动中,我们会遇到无数的物体,并且能在短短几分之一秒内成功区分和识别它们。这不仅适用于粗略的区分(例如,猫与锤子),也适用于需要精细分析的更具挑战性的区分(例如,猫与狗)。这种识别的效率取决于大脑如何组织与物体相关的信息。虽然有几项研究致力于揭示大规模的组织原则,但关于细粒度知识组织的研究相当有限。在这里,我们探索了物体知识的细粒度组织,并研究了可操作物体是否根据其相似性进行组织和表征。为了实现这一点,不同组的个体参与了一项行为和功能磁共振成像(fMRI)适应后释放实验。通过呈现特定物体的不同示例来诱导适应,并通过呈现偏离物体来引发适应后释放。适应物体与偏离物体之间的关系被操纵为四个相似性水平,通过这些物体之间的特征重叠来衡量。我们的研究结果表明,物体相似性的增加会导致反应时间变慢和fMRI适应后释放减弱。具体来说,我们在内侧梭状回、侧副沟、海马旁回、舌回、外侧枕叶复合体和枕顶叶皮层中确定了由相似性驱动的适应后释放调谐曲线。这些结果表明,大脑中物体的处理和表征以及我们对物体进行精细区分的能力以相对参数化的方式反映了现实世界中物体的相似性。