4.4 Article

Defining the Units of Competition: Influences of Perceptual Organization on Competitive Interactions in Human Visual Cortex

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 22, Issue 11, Pages 2417-2426

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/jocn.2009.21391

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [2RO1 MH64043, 1RO1 EY017699, 2P50 MH-62196, F32 EY017502]

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Multiple stimuli that are present simultaneously in the visual field compete for neural representation. At the same time, however, multiple stimuli in cluttered scenes also undergo perceptual organization according to certain rules originally defined by the Gestalt psychologists such as similarity or proximity, thereby segmenting scenes into candidate objects. How can these two seemingly orthogonal neural processes that occur early in the visual processing stream be reconciled? One possibility is that competition occurs among perceptual groups rather than at the level of elements within a group. We probed this idea using fMRI by assessing competitive interactions across visual cortex in displays containing varying degrees of perceptual organization or perceptual grouping (Grp). In strong Grp displays, elements were arranged such that either an illusory figure or a group of collinear elements were present, whereas in weak Grp displays the same elements were arranged randomly. Competitive interactions among stimuli were overcome throughout early visual cortex and V4, when elements were grouped regardless of Grp type. Our findings suggest that context-dependent grouping mechanisms and competitive interactions are linked to provide a bottom-up bias toward candidate objects in cluttered scenes.

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