Origins of food selectivity in human visual cortex.

IF 15.1 1区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Margaret M Henderson, Michael J Tarr, Leila Wehbe
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Several recent studies, enabled by advances in neuroimaging methods and large-scale datasets, have identified areas in human ventral visual cortex that respond more strongly to food images than to images of many other categories, adding to our knowledge about the broad network of regions that are responsive to food. This finding raises important questions about the evolutionary and developmental origins of a possible food-selective neural population, as well as larger questions about the origins of category-selective neural populations more generally. Here, we propose a framework for how visual properties of food (particularly color) and nonvisual signals associated with multimodal reward processing, social cognition, and physical interactions with food may, in combination, contribute to the emergence of food selectivity. We discuss recent research that sheds light on each of these factors, alongside a broader account of category selectivity that incorporates both visual feature statistics and behavioral relevance.

人类视觉皮层中食物选择性的起源。
最近的几项研究,得益于神经成像方法和大规模数据集的进步,已经确定了人类腹侧视觉皮层中对食物图像的反应比对许多其他类别图像的反应更强烈的区域,这增加了我们对食物反应区域的广泛网络的了解。这一发现提出了关于可能的食物选择神经群体的进化和发育起源的重要问题,以及关于更广泛的类别选择神经群体起源的更大问题。在这里,我们提出了一个框架,说明食物的视觉特性(特别是颜色)和与多模态奖励处理、社会认知和与食物的物理相互作用相关的非视觉信号如何共同促进食物选择性的出现。我们讨论了最近的研究,揭示了这些因素中的每一个,以及更广泛的类别选择,包括视觉特征统计和行为相关性。
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来源期刊
Trends in Neurosciences
Trends in Neurosciences 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
26.50
自引率
1.30%
发文量
123
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: For over four decades, Trends in Neurosciences (TINS) has been a prominent source of inspiring reviews and commentaries across all disciplines of neuroscience. TINS is a monthly, peer-reviewed journal, and its articles are curated by the Editor and authored by leading researchers in their respective fields. The journal communicates exciting advances in brain research, serves as a voice for the global neuroscience community, and highlights the contribution of neuroscientific research to medicine and society.
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