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Early Category-Specific Cortical Activation Revealed by Visual Stimulus Inversion

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2008

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Public Library of Science
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Meeren, Hanneke K. M., Nouchine Hadjikhani, Seppo P. Ahlfors, Matti S. Hämäläinen, and Beatrice de Gelder. 2008. Early category-specific cortical activation revealed by visual stimulus inversion. PLoS ONE 3(10): e3503.

Abstract

Visual categorization may already start within the first 100-ms after stimulus onset, in contrast with the long-held view that during this early stage all complex stimuli are processed equally and that category-specific cortical activation occurs only at later stages. The neural basis of this proposed early stage of high-level analysis is however poorly understood. To address this question we used magnetoencephalography and anatomically-constrained distributed source modeling to monitor brain activity with millisecond-resolution while subjects performed an orientation task on the upright and upside-down presented images of three different stimulus categories: faces, houses and bodies. Significant inversion effects were found for all three stimulus categories between 70–100-ms after picture onset with a highly category-specific cortical distribution. Differential responses between upright and inverted faces were found in well-established face-selective areas of the inferior occipital cortex and right fusiform gyrus. In addition, early category-specific inversion effects were found well beyond visual areas. Our results provide the first direct evidence that category-specific processing in high-level category-sensitive cortical areas already takes place within the first 100-ms of visual processing, significantly earlier than previously thought, and suggests the existence of fast category-specific neocortical routes in the human brain.

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neuroscience, cognitive neuroscience, sensory systems, experimental psychology, natural and synthetic vision

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