Human brain regions involved in visual categorization

被引:62
作者
Vogels, R [1 ]
Sary, G
Dupont, P
Orban, GA
机构
[1] Catholic Univ Louvain, Lab Neuroen Psychofysiol, Sch Med, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium
[2] Univ Szeged, Dept Physiol, Szeged, Hungary
[3] Univ Hosp Gasthuisberg, Ctr Positron Emissie Tomog, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium
关键词
D O I
10.1006/nimg.2002.1109
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Categorization of dot patterns is a frequently used paradigm in the behavioral study of natural categorization. To determine the human brain regions involved in categorization, we used Positron Emission Tomography to compare regional Cerebral Blood Flow patterns in two tasks employing patterns that consisted of nine dots. In the categorization task, subjects categorized novel exemplars of two categories, generated by distorting two prototypes, and other random dot patterns. In the control task, subjects judged the position of similarly distorted patterns. Each task was presented at two matched levels of difficulty. Fixation of the fixation target served as baseline condition. The categorization task differentially activated the orbito-frontal cortex and two dorsolateral prefrontal regions. These three prefrontal regions were equally weakly active in the position discrimination task and the baseline condition. The intraparietal sulcus was activated in both tasks, albeit significantly less in the position discrimination than in the categorization task. A similar activation pattern was present in the neostriatum. Task difficulty had no effect. These functional imaging results show that the dot-pattern categorization task strongly engages prefrontal and parietal cortical areas. The activation of prefrontal cortex during visual categorization in humans agrees with the recent finding of category-related responses in macaque prefrontal neurons. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA).
引用
收藏
页码:401 / 414
页数:14
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