A Tale of Two Visual Systems: Invariant and Adaptive Visual Information Representations in the Primate Brain.

IF 5 2区 医学 Q1 NEUROSCIENCES Annual Review of Vision Science Pub Date : 2018-09-15 Epub Date: 2018-06-27 DOI:10.1146/annurev-vision-091517-033954
Yaoda Xu
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引用次数: 31

Abstract

Visual information processing contains two opposite needs. There is both a need to comprehend the richness of the visual world and a need to extract only pertinent visual information to guide thoughts and behavior at a given moment. I argue that these two aspects of visual processing are mediated by two complementary visual systems in the primate brain-specifically, the occipitotemporal cortex (OTC) and the posterior parietal cortex (PPC). The role of OTC in visual processing has been documented extensively by decades of neuroscience research. I review here recent evidence from human imaging and monkey neurophysiology studies to highlight the role of PPC in adaptive visual processing. I first document the diverse array of visual representations found in PPC. I then describe the adaptive nature of visual representation in PPC by contrasting visual processing in OTC and PPC and by showing that visual representations in PPC largely originate from OTC.

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两种视觉系统的故事:灵长类大脑中的不变和自适应视觉信息表征。
视觉信息处理包含两个相反的需求。我们既需要理解视觉世界的丰富性,也需要在特定时刻只提取相关的视觉信息来指导思想和行为。我认为这两个方面的视觉处理是由灵长类大脑中两个互补的视觉系统——枕颞皮层(OTC)和后顶叶皮层(PPC)介导的。OTC在视觉处理中的作用已经被几十年的神经科学研究广泛地记录下来。我在这里回顾了最近来自人类成像和猴子神经生理学研究的证据,以强调PPC在适应性视觉处理中的作用。我首先记录了在PPC中发现的各种视觉表示。然后,我通过对比OTC和PPC的视觉处理,并表明PPC的视觉表征主要源于OTC,来描述PPC中视觉表征的自适应性质。
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来源期刊
Annual Review of Vision Science
Annual Review of Vision Science Medicine-Ophthalmology
CiteScore
11.10
自引率
1.70%
发文量
19
期刊介绍: The Annual Review of Vision Science reviews progress in the visual sciences, a cross-cutting set of disciplines which intersect psychology, neuroscience, computer science, cell biology and genetics, and clinical medicine. The journal covers a broad range of topics and techniques, including optics, retina, central visual processing, visual perception, eye movements, visual development, vision models, computer vision, and the mechanisms of visual disease, dysfunction, and sight restoration. The study of vision is central to progress in many areas of science, and this new journal will explore and expose the connections that link it to biology, behavior, computation, engineering, and medicine.
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