Effects of Partial Occlusion on Response Dynamics and Interregional Processing within Primate Superior Temporal Sulcus.

IF 4 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES
Anna Bognár,Ghazaleh Ghamkhari Nejad,Rufin Vogels
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Recognizing partially occluded objects is a critical visual function that primates perform with ease, yet the underlying neural mechanisms remain incompletely understood. Previous studies in macaque inferotemporal cortex have reported mixed results on whether occlusion delays and reduces responses to partially occluded objects. To address this, we recorded single-unit activity from body-responsive regions of the middle and anterior Superior Temporal Sulcus (STS) in male macaques while presenting body stimuli with varying levels of occlusion using a dot pattern. Occlusion reduced response strength and increased onset latency in both regions, and even low occlusion levels altered response dynamics by increasing the difference between the response trough and second peak. While body selectivity was preserved, body decoding accuracy declined and was delayed as occlusion increased. In contrast to some prior reports, we found no consistent enhancement of body decoding during the late response phase. By controlling for information loss and clutter introduced by the occluder, we found that reductions in response strength were partly due to the deletion of body features, whereas changes in response dynamics primarily reflected interactions between the occluder and the remaining body features. Occlusion delayed the first but not the second response peak, suggesting distinct mechanisms for these phases. Peak decoding at high occlusion levels emerged later in anterior than middle STS, indicating a feedforward component. However, representational similarity analysis combined with Granger causality suggested enhanced feedback from anterior to middle STS under high occlusion. Together, these results highlight the response dynamics supporting robust recognition under occlusion.Significance statement Recognizing objects under partial occlusion is fundamental to visual perception, yet the underlying neural mechanisms remain unclear. We aimed to clarify previous mixed results concerning the effects of occlusion on ventral stream responses and the contribution of feedback within the Superior Temporal Sulcus (STS) during occlusion. We recorded responses of body-responsive neurons to occluded bodies at two hierarchical levels in the macaque STS. Occlusion consistently reduced response strength and increased onset latency, with even low levels of occlusion altering response dynamics. We found no consistent evidence for enhanced body decoding under occlusion during later phases of the response. Temporal differences between middle and anterior STS representations under occlusion suggest an interplay between feedforward and feedback processes during occluded object recognition.
部分闭塞对灵长类动物颞上沟反应动力学和区域间加工的影响。
识别部分遮挡的物体是灵长类动物的一项重要视觉功能,但其潜在的神经机制尚不完全清楚。先前对猕猴颞下皮层的研究报告了关于遮挡是否延迟和减少对部分遮挡物体的反应的混合结果。为了解决这个问题,我们记录了雄性猕猴在呈现不同程度遮挡的身体刺激时,颞上沟中部和前上沟(STS)的身体反应区域的单个活动。遮挡降低了两个区域的反应强度并增加了发病潜伏期,即使低遮挡水平也会通过增加反应低谷和第二峰之间的差异来改变反应动力学。虽然保留了体选择性,但体解码的准确性随着遮挡的增加而下降和延迟。与之前的一些报道相反,我们发现在反应后期没有一致的身体解码增强。通过控制遮挡器引入的信息丢失和杂波,我们发现响应强度的降低部分是由于身体特征的删除,而响应动态的变化主要反映了遮挡器与其余身体特征之间的相互作用。闭塞延迟了第一个反应峰,但没有延迟第二个反应峰,这提示了这些阶段的不同机制。高闭塞水平的解码峰值出现在STS前部比中间晚,表明前馈成分。然而,结合格兰杰因果关系的代表性相似性分析表明,在高闭塞状态下,从前侧到中侧STS的反馈增强。总之,这些结果强调了支持遮挡下鲁棒识别的响应动力学。识别部分遮挡下的物体是视觉感知的基础,但潜在的神经机制尚不清楚。我们的目的是澄清先前关于封堵对腹侧流反应的影响以及封堵期间颞上沟(STS)内反馈的贡献的混合结果。我们记录了猕猴STS中两个层次的体反应神经元对闭塞体的反应。闭塞持续降低反应强度和增加发病潜伏期,即使低水平的闭塞也会改变反应动力学。我们没有发现一致的证据表明,在反应的后期阶段,遮挡下身体解码增强。遮挡下中路和前路STS表征的时间差异表明在遮挡物体识别过程中前馈和反馈过程之间存在相互作用。
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来源期刊
Journal of Neuroscience
Journal of Neuroscience 医学-神经科学
CiteScore
9.30
自引率
3.80%
发文量
1164
审稿时长
12 months
期刊介绍: JNeurosci (ISSN 0270-6474) is an official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. It is published weekly by the Society, fifty weeks a year, one volume a year. JNeurosci publishes papers on a broad range of topics of general interest to those working on the nervous system. Authors now have an Open Choice option for their published articles
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