Large-scale Functional Integration, Rather than Functional Dissociation along Dorsal and Ventral Streams, Underlies Visual Perception and Action.

Abstract:

:Visual dual-stream theory posits that two distinct neural pathways of specific functional significance originate from primary visual areas and reach the inferior temporal (ventral) and posterior parietal areas (dorsal). However, there are several unresolved questions concerning the fundamental aspects of this theory. For example, is the functional dissociation between ventral and dorsal stream driven by features in input stimuli or is it driven by categorical differences between visuoperceptual and visuomotor functions? Is the dual stream rigid or flexible? What is the nature of the interactions between the two streams? We addressed these questions using fMRI recordings on healthy human volunteers and employing stimuli and tasks that can tease out the divergence between visuoperceptual and visuomotor variants of dual-stream theory. fMRI scans were repeated after seven practice sessions that were conducted in a non-MRI environment to investigate the effects of neuroplasticity. Brain activation analysis supports an input-based functional dissociation and existence of context-dependent neuroplasticity in dual-stream areas. Intriguingly, premotor cortex activation was observed in the position perception task and distributed deactivated regions were observed in all perception tasks, thus warranting a network-level analysis. Dynamic causal modeling analysis incorporating activated and deactivated brain areas during perception tasks indicates that the brain dynamics during visual perception and actions could be interpreted within the framework of predictive coding. Effectively, the network-level findings point toward the existence of more intricate context-driven functional networks selective of "what" and "where" information rather than segregated streams of processing along ventral and dorsal brain regions.

journal_name

J Cogn Neurosci

authors

Ray D,Hajare N,Roy D,Banerjee A

doi

10.1162/jocn_a_01527

subject

Has Abstract

pub_date

2020-05-01 00:00:00

pages

847-861

issue

5

eissn

0898-929X

issn

1530-8898

journal_volume

32

pub_type

杂志文章
  • Native and nonnative speakers' processing of a miniature version of Japanese as revealed by ERPs.

    abstract::Several event-related potential (ERP) studies in second language (L2) processing have revealed a differential vulnerability of syntax-related ERP effects in contrast to purely semantic ERP effects. However, it is still debated to what extent a potential critical period for L2 acquisition, as opposed to the attained pr...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 临床试验,杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/0898929055002463

    authors: Mueller JL,Hahne A,Fujii Y,Friederici AD

    更新日期:2005-08-01 00:00:00

  • Cognitive and physiological substrates of impaired sentence processing in Parkinson's disease.

    abstract::Abstract Sentence comprehension is a complex process involving at least a grammatical processor and a procedural component that supports language computations. One type of cerebral architecture that may underlie sentence processing is a network of distributed brain regions. We report two experiments designed to evalua...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.1993.5.4.480

    authors: Grossman M,Carvell S,Gollomp S,Stern MB,Reivich M,Morrison D,Alavi A,Hurtig HI

    更新日期:1993-10-01 00:00:00

  • The timing of action-monitoring processes in the anterior cingulate cortex.

    abstract::The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) has been shown to respond to conflict between simultaneously active, incompatible response tendencies. This area is active during high-conflict correct trials and also when participants make errors. Here, we use the temporal resolution of high-density event-related potentials (ERPs)...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/08989290260045837

    authors: Van Veen V,Carter CS

    更新日期:2002-05-15 00:00:00

  • Left-lateralized N170 effects of visual expertise in reading: evidence from Japanese syllabic and logographic scripts.

    abstract::The N170 component of the event-related potential (ERP) reflects experience-dependent neural changes in several forms of visual expertise, including expertise for visual words. Readers skilled in writing systems that link characters to phonemes (i.e., alphabetic writing) typically produce a left-lateralized N170 to vi...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2008.20125

    authors: Maurer U,Zevin JD,McCandliss BD

    更新日期:2008-10-01 00:00:00

  • fMRI activity patterns in human LOC carry information about object exemplars within category.

    abstract::Abstract The lateral occipital complex (LOC) is a set of areas in the human occipito-temporal cortex responding to objects as opposed to low-level control stimuli. Conventional functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) analysis methods based on regional averages could not detect signals discriminative of different ...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2008.20019

    authors: Eger E,Ashburner J,Haynes JD,Dolan RJ,Rees G

    更新日期:2008-02-01 00:00:00

  • Time-locked perceptual fading induced by visual transients.

    abstract::After prolonged fixation, a stationary object placed in the peripheral visual field fades and disappears from our visual awareness, especially at low luminance contrast (the Troxler effect). Here, we report that similar fading can be triggered by visual transients, such as additional visual stimuli flashed near the ob...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/089892903322307384

    authors: Kanai R,Kamitani Y

    更新日期:2003-07-01 00:00:00

  • Spontaneous mentalizing predicts the fundamental attribution error.

    abstract::When explaining the reasons for others' behavior, perceivers often overemphasize underlying dispositions and personality traits over the power of the situation, a tendency known as the fundamental attribution error. One possibility is that this bias results from the spontaneous processing of others' mental states, suc...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00513

    authors: Moran JM,Jolly E,Mitchell JP

    更新日期:2014-03-01 00:00:00

  • Language acquisition and cerebral specialization in 20-month-old infants.

    abstract::Abstract The purpose of the present study was to examine patterns of neural activity relevant to language processing in 20-month-old infants, and to determine whether or not changes in cerebral organization occur as a function of specific changes in language development. Event-related potentials (ERPs) were recorded a...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.1993.5.3.317

    authors: Mills DL,Coffey-Corina SA,Neville HJ

    更新日期:1993-07-01 00:00:00

  • The Timing of Regular Sequences: Production, Perception, and Covariation.

    abstract::The temporal structure of behavior provides information that allows the tracking of temporal regularity in the sensory and sensorimotor domains. In turn, temporal regularity allows the generation of predictions about upcoming events and to adjust behavior accordingly. These mechanisms are essential to ensure behavior ...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00805

    authors: Schwartze M,Kotz SA

    更新日期:2015-09-01 00:00:00

  • Fronto-temporal interactions during overt verbal initiation and suppression.

    abstract::The Hayling Sentence Completion Task (HSCT) is known to activate left hemisphere frontal and temporal language regions. However, the effective connectivity between frontal and temporal language regions associated with the task has yet to be examined. The aims of the study were to examine activation and effective conne...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2008.20107

    authors: Allen P,Mechelli A,Stephan KE,Day F,Dalton J,Williams S,McGuire PK

    更新日期:2008-09-01 00:00:00

  • Morphosyntactic processing in late second-language learners.

    abstract::The goal of the present study was to investigate the electrophysiological correlates of second-language (L2) morphosyntactic processing in highly proficient late learners of an L2 with long exposure to the L2 environment. ERPs were collected from 22 English-Spanish late learners while they read sentences in which morp...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21304

    authors: Dowens MG,Vergara M,Barber HA,Carreiras M

    更新日期:2010-08-01 00:00:00

  • Irrelevant singletons in visual search do not capture attention but can produce nonspatial filtering costs.

    abstract::It is not clear how salient distractors affect visual processing. The debate concerning the issue of whether irrelevant salient items capture spatial attention [e.g., Theeuwes, J., Atchley, P., & Kramer, A. F. On the time course of top-down and bottom-up control of visual attention. In S. Monsell & J. Driver (Eds.), A...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21390

    authors: Wykowska A,Schubö A

    更新日期:2011-03-01 00:00:00

  • The eyes remember it: oculography and pupillometry during recollection in three amnesic patients.

    abstract::Two patients (TC and SS) with lesions that included the hippocampal regions (predominantly on the left side) were severely impaired in their recall of simple, verbally stated facts. However, both patients remembered spatial information that was temporally associated with semantic information. Specifically, TC and SS c...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2007.19.11.1888

    authors: Laeng B,Waterloo K,Johnsen SH,Bakke SJ,Låg T,Simonsen SS,Høgsaet J

    更新日期:2007-11-01 00:00:00

  • Target detection by opponent coding in monkey prefrontal cortex.

    abstract::The pFC plays a key role in flexible, context-specific decision making. One proposal [Machens, C. K., Romo, R., & Brody, C. D. Flexible control of mutual inhibition: A neural model of two-interval discrimination. Science, 307, 1121-1124, 2005] is that prefrontal cells may be dynamically organized into opponent coding ...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21216

    authors: Kusunoki M,Sigala N,Nili H,Gaffan D,Duncan J

    更新日期:2010-04-01 00:00:00

  • Dopamine function and the efficiency of human movement.

    abstract::To sustain successful behavior in dynamic environments, active organisms must be able to learn from the consequences of their actions and predict action outcomes. One of the most important discoveries in systems neuroscience over the last 15 years has been about the key role of the neurotransmitter dopamine in mediati...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00503

    authors: Gepshtein S,Li X,Snider J,Plank M,Lee D,Poizner H

    更新日期:2014-03-01 00:00:00

  • Neural responses to ambiguity involve domain-general and domain-specific emotion processing systems.

    abstract::Extant research has examined the process of decision making under uncertainty, specifically in situations of ambiguity. However, much of this work has been conducted in the context of semantic and low-level visual processing. An open question is whether ambiguity in social signals (e.g., emotional facial expressions) ...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00363

    authors: Neta M,Kelley WM,Whalen PJ

    更新日期:2013-04-01 00:00:00

  • The role of high spatial frequencies in hemispheric processing of categorical and coordinate spatial relations.

    abstract::Right-handed participants performed categorical and coordinate spatial relation tasks on stimuli presented either to the left visual field-right hemisphere (LVF-RH) or to the right visual field-left hemisphere (RVF-LH). The stimuli were either unfiltered or low-pass filtered (i.e., devoid of high spatial frequency con...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 临床试验,杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/0898929042568604

    authors: Okubo M,Michimata C

    更新日期:2004-11-01 00:00:00

  • Interhemispheric Binding of Ambiguous Visual Motion Is Associated with Changes in Beta Oscillatory Activity but Not with Gamma Range Synchrony.

    abstract::In vision, perceptual features are processed in several regions distributed across the brain. Yet, the brain achieves a coherent perception of visual scenes and objects through integration of these features, which are encoded in spatially segregated brain areas. How the brain seamlessly achieves this accurate integrat...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_01158

    authors: Costa GN,Duarte JV,Martins R,Wibral M,Castelo-Branco M

    更新日期:2017-11-01 00:00:00

  • Familiarity or conceptual priming: event-related potentials in name recognition.

    abstract::Recent interest has been drawn to the separate components of recognition memory, as studied by event-related potentials (ERPs). In ERPs, recollection is usually accompanied by a late, parietal positive deflection. An earlier, frontal component has been suggested to be a counterpart, accompanying recognition by familia...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21045

    authors: Stenberg G,Hellman J,Johansson M,Rosén I

    更新日期:2009-03-01 00:00:00

  • Neural biases to covert and overt signals of fear: dissociation by trait anxiety and depression.

    abstract::Although biases toward signals of fear may be an evolutionary adaptation necessary for survival, heightened biases may be maladaptive and associated with anxiety or depression. In this study, event-related potentials (ERPs) were used to examine the time course of neural responses to facial fear stimuli (versus neutral...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2007.19.10.1595

    authors: Williams LM,Kemp AH,Felmingham K,Liddell BJ,Palmer DM,Bryant RA

    更新日期:2007-10-01 00:00:00

  • The default network distinguishes construals of proximal versus distal events.

    abstract::Humans enjoy a singular capacity to imagine events that differ from the "here-and-now." Recent cognitive neuroscience research has linked such simulation processes to the brain's "default network." However, extant cognitive theories suggest that perceivers reliably simulate only relatively proximal experiences-those t...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00009

    authors: Tamir DI,Mitchell JP

    更新日期:2011-10-01 00:00:00

  • Trade-off between capacity and precision in visuospatial working memory.

    abstract::Limitations in the performance of working memory (WM) tasks have been characterized in terms of the number of items retained (capacity) and in terms of the precision with which the information is retained. The neural mechanisms behind these limitations are still unclear. Here we used a biological constrained computati...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00485

    authors: Roggeman C,Klingberg T,Feenstra HE,Compte A,Almeida R

    更新日期:2014-02-01 00:00:00

  • Lexical competition in nonnative speech comprehension.

    abstract::Electrophysiological studies consistently find N400 effects of semantic incongruity in nonnative (L2) language comprehension. These N400 effects are often delayed compared with native (L1) comprehension, suggesting that semantic integration in one's second language occurs later than in one's first language. In this st...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2009.21301

    authors: FitzPatrick I,Indefrey P

    更新日期:2010-06-01 00:00:00

  • Emotional and temporal aspects of situation model processing during text comprehension: an event-related fMRI study.

    abstract::Language comprehension in everyday life requires the continuous integration of prior discourse context and general world knowledge with the current utterance or sentence. In the neurolinguistic literature, these so-called situation model building processes have been ascribed to the prefrontal cortex or to the right he...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/0898929053747658

    authors: Ferstl EC,Rinck M,von Cramon DY

    更新日期:2005-05-01 00:00:00

  • Long-term memories bias sensitivity and target selection in complex scenes.

    abstract::In everyday situations, we often rely on our memories to find what we are looking for in our cluttered environment. Recently, we developed a new experimental paradigm to investigate how long-term memory (LTM) can guide attention and showed how the pre-exposure to a complex scene in which a target location had been lea...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00294

    authors: Patai EZ,Doallo S,Nobre AC

    更新日期:2012-12-01 00:00:00

  • Capture by Context Elements, Not Attentional Suppression of Distractors, Explains the PD with Small Search Displays.

    abstract::Top-down control of attention allows us to resist attentional capture by salient stimuli that are irrelevant to our current goals. Recently, it was proposed that attentional suppression of salient distractors contributes to top-down control by biasing attention away from the distractor. With small search displays, att...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_01535

    authors: Kerzel D,Burra N

    更新日期:2020-06-01 00:00:00

  • Short- and long-range neural synchrony in grapheme-color synesthesia.

    abstract::Grapheme-color synesthesia is a perceptual phenomenon where single graphemes (e.g., the letter "E") induce simultaneous sensations of colors (e.g., the color green) that were not objectively shown. Current models disagree as to whether the color sensations arise from increased short-range connectivity between anatomic...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_00374

    authors: Volberg G,Karmann A,Birkner S,Greenlee MW

    更新日期:2013-07-01 00:00:00

  • A model that accounts for activity prior to sensory inputs and responses during matching-to-sample tasks.

    abstract::Neural network models were examined during delayed matching-to-sample tasks (DMS), and neurons in a monkey's prefrontal cortex were studied during the performance of comparable tasks. In DMS, various input stimuli follow a sample stimulus, and an output should occur whenever the sample reappears. Our previous models h...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/089892900562255

    authors: Moody SL,Wise SP

    更新日期:2000-05-01 00:00:00

  • Functionally Separable Font-invariant and Font-sensitive Neural Populations in Occipitotemporal Cortex.

    abstract::Reading relies on the rapid visual recognition of words viewed in a wide variety of fonts. We used fMRI to identify neural populations showing reduced fMRI responses to repeated words displayed in different fonts ("font-invariant" repetition suppression). We also identified neural populations showing greater fMRI resp...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn_a_01408

    authors: Zhou Z,Vilis T,Strother L

    更新日期:2019-07-01 00:00:00

  • How to compare two quantities? A computational model of flutter discrimination.

    abstract::A task that has been intensively studied at the neural level is f lutter discrimination. I argue that f lutter discrimination entails a combination of a temporal assignment problem and a quantity comparison problem, and propose a neural network model of how these problems are solved. The network combines unsupervised ...

    journal_title:Journal of cognitive neuroscience

    pub_type: 杂志文章

    doi:10.1162/jocn.2007.19.3.409

    authors: Verguts T

    更新日期:2007-03-01 00:00:00