4.7 Article

Feedback from lateral occipital cortex to V1/V2 triggers object completion: Evidence from functional magnetic resonance imaging and dynamic causal modeling

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 42, Issue 17, Pages 5581-5594

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.25637

Keywords

effective connectivity; feedback connections; illusory figure; modal completion; object integration

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation [FOR 2293/1]

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The study found that visual performance benefits when an integrated object is task-relevant. Dynamic causal modeling was used to analyze the connections between regions associated with illusory figure completion. The results show that there are feedback connections between different areas of the visual system, playing a key role in processing integrated objects and details.
Illusory figures demonstrate the visual system's ability to integrate disparate parts into coherent wholes. We probed this object integration process by either presenting an integrated diamond shape or a comparable ungrouped configuration that did not render a complete object. Two tasks were used that either required localization of a target dot (relative to the presented configuration) or discrimination of the dot's luminance. The results showed that only when the configuration was task relevant (in the localization task), performance benefited from the presentation of an integrated object. Concurrent functional magnetic resonance imaging was performed and analyzed using dynamic causal modeling to investigate the (causal) relationship between regions that are associated with illusory figure completion. We found object-specific feedback connections between the lateral occipital cortex (LOC) and early visual cortex (V1/V2). These modulatory connections persisted across task demands and hemispheres. Our results thus provide direct evidence that interactions between mid-level and early visual processing regions engage in illusory figure perception. These data suggest that LOC first integrates inputs from multiple neurons in lower-level cortices, generating a global shape representation while more fine-graded object details are then determined via feedback to early visual areas, independently of the current task demands.

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