Literature DB >> 10996068

The effects of visual object priming on brain activation before and after recognition.

T W James1, G K Humphrey, J S Gati, R S Menon, M A Goodale.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Recognizing an object is improved by recent experience with that object even if one cannot recall seeing the object. This perceptual facilitation as a result of previous experience is called priming. In neuroimaging studies, priming is often associated with a decrease in activation in brain regions involved in object recognition. It is thought that this occurs because priming causes a sharpening of object representations which leads to more efficient processing and, consequently, a reduction in neural activity. Recent evidence has suggested, however, that the apparent effect of priming on brain activation may vary as a function of whether the neural activity is measured before or after recognition has taken place.
RESULTS: Using a gradual 'unmasking' technique, we presented primed and non-primed objects to subjects, and measured activation time courses using high-field functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). As the objects were slowly revealed, but before recognition had occurred, activation increased from baseline level to a peak that corresponded in time to the subjects' behavioural recognition responses. The activation peak for primed objects occurred sooner than the peak for non-primed objects, and subjects responded sooner when presented with a primed object than with a non-primed object. During this pre-recognition phase, primed objects produced more activation than non-primed objects. After recognition, activation declined rapidly for both primed and non-primed objects, but now activation was lower for the primed objects.
CONCLUSIONS: Priming did not produce a general decrease in activation in the brain regions involved in object recognition but, instead, produced a shift in the time of peak activation that corresponded to the shift in time seen in the subjects' behavioural recognition performance.

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10996068     DOI: 10.1016/s0960-9822(00)00655-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  34 in total

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7.  Cortical regions associated with different aspects of object recognition performance.

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8.  Repetition-induced changes in BOLD response reflect accumulation of neural activity.

Authors:  Thomas W James; Isabel Gauthier
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9.  Evidence accumulation and the moment of recognition: dissociating perceptual recognition processes using fMRI.

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