Literature DB >> 7717691

Selectively distributed processing of visual object recognition in the temporal and frontal lobes of the human brain.

M Seeck1, D Schomer, N Mainwaring, J Ives, D Dubuisson, H Blume, R Cosgrove, B J Ransil, M M Mesulam.   

Abstract

Evoked potentials to visually driven cognitive tasks were recorded through depth electrodes placed bilaterally within the amygdala, hippocampus, midtemporal and inferotemporal cortex, and lateral frontal cortex of 6 epileptic patients. Task-related differential response patterns were used to identify the recording sites engaged by specific aspects of visual encoding. In this group of 6 patients, the amygdala was most frequently engaged in encoding the familiarity of faces; midtemporal and inferotemporal cortex, in encoding perceptual identity and object categorization; and lateral frontal cortex, in holding visual object information in working memory. The two aspects of encoding that most frequently engaged the hippocampal region were related to working memory and object categorization. The processing of complex visual knowledge is thus anatomically distributed but regionally specialized. These experiments also showed that identical input and output parameters can engage different areas of the brain depending on the nature of the instructional set.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1995        PMID: 7717691     DOI: 10.1002/ana.410370417

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Neurol        ISSN: 0364-5134            Impact factor:   10.422


  10 in total

1.  Imaging the electrical activity of the brain: ELECTRA.

Authors:  R Grave de Peralta Menendez; S L Gonzalez Andino; S Morand; C M Michel; T Landis
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2000       Impact factor: 5.038

2.  Corticolimbic interactions associated with performance on a short-term memory task are modified by age.

Authors:  V Della-Maggiore; A B Sekuler; C L Grady; P J Bennett; R Sekuler; A R McIntosh
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2000-11-15       Impact factor: 6.167

3.  Shifts of effective connectivity within a language network during rhyming and spelling.

Authors:  Tali Bitan; James R Booth; Janet Choy; Douglas D Burman; Darren R Gitelman; M-Marsel Mesulam
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2005-06-01       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  Temporal precedence of emotion over attention modulations in the lateral amygdala: Intracranial ERP evidence from a patient with temporal lobe epilepsy.

Authors:  Gilles Pourtois; Laurent Spinelli; Margitta Seeck; Patrik Vuilleumier
Journal:  Cogn Affect Behav Neurosci       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 3.282

5.  A human intracranial study of long-range oscillatory coherence across a frontal-occipital-hippocampal brain network during visual object processing.

Authors:  Pejman Sehatpour; Sophie Molholm; Theodore H Schwartz; Jeannette R Mahoney; Ashesh D Mehta; Daniel C Javitt; Patric K Stanton; John J Foxe
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-03-11       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Neural correlates of conceptual object priming in young and older adults: an event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study.

Authors:  Soledad Ballesteros; Gérard N Bischof; Joshua O Goh; Denise C Park
Journal:  Neurobiol Aging       Date:  2012-10-26       Impact factor: 4.673

7.  Interhemispheric differences of fMRI responses to visual stimuli in patients with side-fixed migraine aura.

Authors:  Anders Hougaard; Faisal Mohammad Amin; Michael B Hoffmann; Egill Rostrup; Henrik B W Larsson; Mohammad Sohail Asghar; Vibeke Andrée Larsen; Jes Olesen; Messoud Ashina
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2013-09-03       Impact factor: 5.038

8.  Modularity and granularity across the language network-A primary progressive aphasia perspective.

Authors:  M-Marsel Mesulam; Christina A Coventry; Benjamin M Rader; Alan Kuang; Jaiashre Sridhar; Adam Martersteck; Hui Zhang; Cynthia K Thompson; Sandra Weintraub; Emily J Rogalski
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2021-05-24       Impact factor: 4.644

9.  Scene Construction, Visual Foraging, and Active Inference.

Authors:  M Berk Mirza; Rick A Adams; Christoph D Mathys; Karl J Friston
Journal:  Front Comput Neurosci       Date:  2016-06-14       Impact factor: 2.380

10.  Advanced visual network and cerebellar hyperresponsiveness to trigeminal nociception in migraine with aura.

Authors:  Antonio Russo; Alessandro Tessitore; Marcello Silvestro; Federica Di Nardo; Francesca Trojsi; Teresa Del Santo; Rosa De Micco; Fabrizio Esposito; Gioacchino Tedeschi
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2019-05-03       Impact factor: 7.277

  10 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.