fMR-adaptation reveals invariant coding of biological motion on the human STS

被引:49
作者
Grossman, Emily D. [1 ]
Jardine, Nicole L.
Pyles, John A.
机构
[1] Univ Calif Irvine, Ctr Cognit Neurosci, Dept Cognit Sci, Irvine, CA 92697 USA
[2] Vanderbilt Univ, Vanderbilt Vision Res Ctr, Dept Psychol, Nashville, TN USA
[3] Carnegie Mellon Univ, Ctr Neural Basis Cognit, Pittsburgh, PA USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
biological motion; superior temporal sulcus; visual recognition; fMRI; vision; SUPERIOR TEMPORAL SULCUS; FUNCTIONAL NEUROANATOMY; INFEROTEMPORAL CORTEX; OBJECT RECOGNITION; VISUAL-PERCEPTION; NEURAL MECHANISMS; POLYSENSORY AREA; MACAQUE MONKEY; BRAIN ACTIVITY; NEURONAL BASIS;
D O I
10.3389/neuro.09.015.2010
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Neuroimaging studies of biological motion perception have found a network of coordinated brain areas, the hub of which appears to be the human posterior superior temporal sulcus (STSp). Understanding the functional role of the STSp requires characterizing the response tuning of neuronal populations underlying the BOLD response. Thus far our understanding of these response properties comes from single-unit studies of the monkey anterior STS, which has individual neurons tuned to body actions, with a small population invariant to changes in viewpoint, position and size of the action being viewed. To measure for homologous functional properties on the human STS, we used fMR-adaptation to investigate action, position and size invariance. Observers viewed pairs of point-light animations depicting human actions that were either identical, differed in the action depicted, locally scrambled, or differed in the viewing perspective, the position or the size. While extrastriate hMT+ had neural signals indicative of viewpoint specificity, the human STS adapted for all of these changes, as compared to viewing two different actions. Similar findings were observed in more posterior brain areas also implicated in action recognition. Our findings are evidence for viewpoint invariance in the human STS and related brain areas, with the implication that actions are abstracted into object-centered representations during visual analysis.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 114 条
[51]  
HICKOK G, SPRINGER HD IN PRESS
[52]   Eight Problems for the Mirror Neuron Theory of Action Understanding in Monkeys and Humans [J].
Hickok, Gregory .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2009, 21 (07) :1229-1243
[53]   Neuronal basis of the motion aftereffect reconsidered [J].
Huk, AC ;
Ress, D ;
Heeger, DJ .
NEURON, 2001, 32 (01) :161-172
[54]  
Huk AC, 2002, J NEUROSCI, V22, P7195
[55]   Eccentric perception of biological motion is unscalably poor [J].
Ikeda, H ;
Blake, R ;
Watanabe, K .
VISION RESEARCH, 2005, 45 (15) :1935-1943
[56]   Neural representation for the perception of the intentionality of actions [J].
Jellema, T ;
Baker, CI ;
Wicker, B ;
Perrett, DI .
BRAIN AND COGNITION, 2000, 44 (02) :280-302
[57]   Single cell integration of animate form, motion and location in the superior temporal cortex of the macaque monkey [J].
Jellema, T ;
Maassen, G ;
Perrett, DI .
CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2004, 14 (07) :781-790
[58]   Neural representations of perceived bodily actions using a categorical frame of reference [J].
Jellema, Tjeerd ;
Perrett, David I. .
NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2006, 44 (09) :1535-1546
[59]   CONNEXIONS OF SOMATIC SENSORY CORTEX OF RHESUS MONKEY .3. THALAMIC CONNEXIONS [J].
JONES, EG ;
POWELL, TPS .
BRAIN, 1970, 93 :37-&
[60]   Specificity of action representations in the lateral occipitotemporal cortex [J].
Kable, Joseph W. ;
Chatterjee, Anjan .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 18 (09) :1498-1517