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Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity

The specificity of neural responses to visual objects is a major topic in visual neuroscience. In humans, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have identified several regions of the occipital and temporal lobe that appear specific to faces, letter strings, scenes, or tools. Direct el...

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Autores principales: Vidal, Juan R., Ossandón, Tomás, Jerbi, Karim, Dalal, Sarang S., Minotti, Lorella, Ryvlin, Philippe, Kahane, Philippe, Lachaux, Jean-Philippe
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3024557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21267419
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00195
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author Vidal, Juan R.
Ossandón, Tomás
Jerbi, Karim
Dalal, Sarang S.
Minotti, Lorella
Ryvlin, Philippe
Kahane, Philippe
Lachaux, Jean-Philippe
author_facet Vidal, Juan R.
Ossandón, Tomás
Jerbi, Karim
Dalal, Sarang S.
Minotti, Lorella
Ryvlin, Philippe
Kahane, Philippe
Lachaux, Jean-Philippe
author_sort Vidal, Juan R.
collection PubMed
description The specificity of neural responses to visual objects is a major topic in visual neuroscience. In humans, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have identified several regions of the occipital and temporal lobe that appear specific to faces, letter strings, scenes, or tools. Direct electrophysiological recordings in the visual cortical areas of epileptic patients have largely confirmed this modular organization, using either single-neuron peri-stimulus time-histogram or intracerebral event-related potentials (iERP). In parallel, a new research stream has emerged using high-frequency gamma-band activity (50–150 Hz) (GBR) and low-frequency alpha/beta activity (8–24 Hz) (ABR) to map functional networks in humans. An obvious question is now whether the functional organization of the visual cortex revealed by fMRI, ERP, GBR, and ABR coincide. We used direct intracerebral recordings in 18 epileptic patients to directly compare GBR, ABR, and ERP elicited by the presentation of seven major visual object categories (faces, scenes, houses, consonants, pseudowords, tools, and animals), in relation to previous fMRI studies. Remarkably both GBR and iERP showed strong category-specificity that was in many cases sufficient to infer stimulus object category from the neural response at single-trial level. However, we also found a strong discrepancy between the selectivity of GBR, ABR, and ERP with less than 10% of spatial overlap between sites eliciting the same category-specificity. Overall, we found that selective neural responses to visual objects were broadly distributed in the brain with a prominent spatial cluster located in the posterior temporal cortex. Moreover, the different neural markers (GBR, ABR, and iERP) that elicit selectivity toward specific visual object categories present little spatial overlap suggesting that the information content of each marker can uniquely characterize high-level visual information in the brain.
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spelling pubmed-30245572011-01-25 Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity Vidal, Juan R. Ossandón, Tomás Jerbi, Karim Dalal, Sarang S. Minotti, Lorella Ryvlin, Philippe Kahane, Philippe Lachaux, Jean-Philippe Front Hum Neurosci Neuroscience The specificity of neural responses to visual objects is a major topic in visual neuroscience. In humans, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) studies have identified several regions of the occipital and temporal lobe that appear specific to faces, letter strings, scenes, or tools. Direct electrophysiological recordings in the visual cortical areas of epileptic patients have largely confirmed this modular organization, using either single-neuron peri-stimulus time-histogram or intracerebral event-related potentials (iERP). In parallel, a new research stream has emerged using high-frequency gamma-band activity (50–150 Hz) (GBR) and low-frequency alpha/beta activity (8–24 Hz) (ABR) to map functional networks in humans. An obvious question is now whether the functional organization of the visual cortex revealed by fMRI, ERP, GBR, and ABR coincide. We used direct intracerebral recordings in 18 epileptic patients to directly compare GBR, ABR, and ERP elicited by the presentation of seven major visual object categories (faces, scenes, houses, consonants, pseudowords, tools, and animals), in relation to previous fMRI studies. Remarkably both GBR and iERP showed strong category-specificity that was in many cases sufficient to infer stimulus object category from the neural response at single-trial level. However, we also found a strong discrepancy between the selectivity of GBR, ABR, and ERP with less than 10% of spatial overlap between sites eliciting the same category-specificity. Overall, we found that selective neural responses to visual objects were broadly distributed in the brain with a prominent spatial cluster located in the posterior temporal cortex. Moreover, the different neural markers (GBR, ABR, and iERP) that elicit selectivity toward specific visual object categories present little spatial overlap suggesting that the information content of each marker can uniquely characterize high-level visual information in the brain. Frontiers Research Foundation 2010-11-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3024557/ /pubmed/21267419 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00195 Text en Copyright © 2010 Vidal, Ossandón, Jerbi, Dalal, Minotti, Ryvlin, Kahane and Lachaux. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to an exclusive license agreement between the authors and the Frontiers Research Foundation, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original authors and source are credited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Vidal, Juan R.
Ossandón, Tomás
Jerbi, Karim
Dalal, Sarang S.
Minotti, Lorella
Ryvlin, Philippe
Kahane, Philippe
Lachaux, Jean-Philippe
Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity
title Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity
title_full Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity
title_fullStr Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity
title_full_unstemmed Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity
title_short Category-Specific Visual Responses: An Intracranial Study Comparing Gamma, Beta, Alpha, and ERP Response Selectivity
title_sort category-specific visual responses: an intracranial study comparing gamma, beta, alpha, and erp response selectivity
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3024557/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21267419
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnhum.2010.00195
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