4.7 Article

Representation of color, form, and their conjunction across the human ventral visual pathway

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 251, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.118941

Keywords

Color; Ventral stream; Feature binding; Early visual cortex

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE1745303]
  2. National Institute of Health [1R01EY022355, 1R01EY030854]
  3. NIH Shared Instrumentation Grant to Harvard Center for Brain Science [S10OD020039]

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Despite decades of research, our understanding of the relationship between color and form processing in the primate ventral visual pathway remains incomplete. Using fMRI multivoxel pattern analysis, this study found that color and form could be decoded from activity in early visual areas V1 to V4, as well as in the posterior color-selective region and shape-selective regions in ventral and lateral occipitotemporal cortex. The study also revealed decoding biases towards one feature or the other in the color-and shape-selective regions, and nonlinear, interactive coding of color and the simple form feature in several early visual regions.
Despite decades of research, our understanding of the relationship between color and form processing in the primate ventral visual pathway remains incomplete. Using fMRI multivoxel pattern analysis, we examined coding of color and form, using a simple form feature (orientation) and a mid-level form feature (curvature), in human ventral visual processing regions. We found that both color and form could be decoded from activity in early visual areas V1 to V4, as well as in the posterior color-selective region and shape-selective regions in ventral and lateral occipitotemporal cortex defined based on their univariate selectivity to color or shape, respectively (the central color region only showed color but not form decoding). Meanwhile, decoding biases towards one feature or the other existed in the color-and shape-selective regions, consistent with their univariate feature selectivity reported in past studies. Additional extensive analyses show that while all these regions contain independent (linearly additive) coding for both features, several early visual regions also encode the conjunction of color and the simple, but not the complex, form feature in a nonlinear, interactive manner. Taken together, the results show that color and form are encoded in a biased distributed and largely independent manner across ventral visual regions in the human brain.

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