The anatomy of object processing: the role of anteromedial temporal cortex.

Peter Bright, Helen E Moss, Emmanuel A Stamatakis, Lorraine K Tyler
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引用次数: 67

Abstract

How objects are represented and processed in the brain remains a key issue in cognitive neuroscience. We have developed a conceptual structure account in which category-specific semantic deficits emerge due to differences in the structure and content of concepts rather than from explicit divisions of conceptual knowledge in separate stores. The primary claim is that concepts associated with particular categories (e.g., animals, tools) differ in the number and type of properties and the extent to which these properties are correlated with each other. In this review, we describe recent neuropsychological and neuroimaging studies in which we have extended our theoretical account by incorporating recent claims about the neuroanatomical basis of feature integration and differentiation that arise from research into hierarchical object processing streams in nonhuman primates and humans. A clear picture has emerged in which the human perirhinal cortex and neighbouring anteromedial temporal structures appear to provide the neural infrastructure for making fine-grained discriminations among objects, suggesting that damage within the perirhinal cortex may underlie the emergence of category-specific semantic deficits in brain-damaged patients.

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物体加工的解剖:前内侧颞叶皮层的作用。
物体如何在大脑中呈现和处理仍然是认知神经科学的一个关键问题。我们开发了一种概念结构解释,其中类别特定的语义缺陷是由于概念的结构和内容的差异而出现的,而不是来自单独存储的概念知识的明确划分。主要的主张是,与特定类别(例如,动物,工具)相关的概念在属性的数量和类型以及这些属性相互关联的程度上有所不同。在这篇综述中,我们描述了最近的神经心理学和神经影像学研究,在这些研究中,我们通过纳入最近关于非人类灵长类动物和人类分层对象处理流研究中出现的特征整合和分化的神经解剖学基础的主张,扩展了我们的理论解释。一幅清晰的图像显示,人类的鼻周皮层和邻近的前内侧颞叶结构似乎提供了对物体进行细粒度区分的神经基础设施,这表明,在脑损伤患者中,鼻周皮层的损伤可能是类别特异性语义缺陷出现的基础。
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