Literature DB >> 15019707

Interaction of top-down and bottom-up processing in the fast visual analysis of natural scenes.

Arnaud Delorme1, Guillaume A Rousselet, Marc J-M Macé, Michèle Fabre-Thorpe.   

Abstract

The influence of task requirements on the fast visual processing of natural scenes was studied in 14 human subjects performing in alternation an "animal" categorization task and a single-photograph recognition task. Target photographs were randomly mixed with non-target images and flashed for only 20 ms. Subjects had to respond to targets within 1 s. Processing time for image-recognition was 30-40 ms shorter than for the categorization task, both for the fastest behavioral responses and for the latency at which event related potentials evoked by target and non-target stimuli started to diverge. The faster processing in image-recognition is shown to be due to the use of low-level cues, but source analysis produced evidence that, regardless of the task, the dipoles accounting for the differential activity had the same localization and orientation in the occipito-temporal cortex. We suggest that both tasks involve the same visual pathway and the same decisional brain area but because of the total predictability of the target in the image recognition task, the first wave of bottom-up feed-forward information is speeded up by top-down influences that might originate in the prefrontal cortex and preset lower levels of the visual pathway to the known target features.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15019707     DOI: 10.1016/j.cogbrainres.2003.11.010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res Cogn Brain Res        ISSN: 0926-6410


  29 in total

1.  The effects of alphabet and expertise on letter perception.

Authors:  Robert W Wiley; Colin Wilson; Brenda Rapp
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Hum Percept Perform       Date:  2016-02-25       Impact factor: 3.332

2.  The dynamics of categorization: Unraveling rapid categorization.

Authors:  Michael L Mack; Thomas J Palmeri
Journal:  J Exp Psychol Gen       Date:  2015-05-04

3.  Canonical bicoherence analysis of dynamic EEG data.

Authors:  Huixia He; David J Thomson
Journal:  J Comput Neurosci       Date:  2009-07-23       Impact factor: 1.621

4.  Statistical test of VEP waveform equality.

Authors:  Rockefeller S L Young; Eiji Kimura
Journal:  Doc Ophthalmol       Date:  2009-12-02       Impact factor: 2.379

5.  Functional connectivity in the prefrontal cortex measured by near-infrared spectroscopy during ultrarapid object recognition.

Authors:  Andrei V Medvedev; Jana M Kainerstorfer; Sergey V Borisov; John VanMeter
Journal:  J Biomed Opt       Date:  2011 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 3.170

6.  The relationship between ERP components and EEG spatial complexity in a visual Go/Nogo task.

Authors:  Huibin Jia; Huayun Li; Dongchuan Yu
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2016-10-26       Impact factor: 2.714

7.  Ensemble coding of crowd speed using biological motion.

Authors:  Tram T N Nguyen; Quoc C Vuong; George Mather; Ian M Thornton
Journal:  Atten Percept Psychophys       Date:  2020-11-09       Impact factor: 2.199

8.  Conceptual penetration of visual processing.

Authors:  Gary Lupyan; Sharon L Thompson-Schill; Daniel Swingley
Journal:  Psychol Sci       Date:  2010-03-23

9.  Identifying electrode bridging from electrical distance distributions: a survey of publicly-available EEG data using a new method.

Authors:  Daniel M Alschuler; Craig E Tenke; Gerard E Bruder; Jürgen Kayser
Journal:  Clin Neurophysiol       Date:  2013-10-02       Impact factor: 3.708

10.  Interaction between attention and bottom-up saliency mediates the representation of foreground and background in an auditory scene.

Authors:  Mounya Elhilali; Juanjuan Xiang; Shihab A Shamma; Jonathan Z Simon
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2009-06-16       Impact factor: 8.029

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.