4.5 Review

Reunification of Object and View-Center Background Information in the Primate Medial Temporal Lobe

Journal

FRONTIERS IN BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2021.756801

Keywords

macaque monkey; medial temporal lobe; perirhinal cortex; inferotemporal cortex; ventral pathway; figure-ground segmentation; relational space; view-center background

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31421003, 31871139]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [7100602954]
  3. Peking University Boya Postdoctoral Fellowship

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Recent studies have shown that the medial temporal lobe is involved in scene perception as well as episodic memory, with object and location being two key factors. Researchers have proposed a reunification theory based on anatomical and physiological findings, which explains how object-location signals are constructed in the brain.
Recent work has shown that the medial temporal lobe (MTL), including the hippocampus (HPC) and its surrounding limbic cortices, plays a role in scene perception in addition to episodic memory. The two basic factors of scene perception are the object (what) and location (where). In this review, we first summarize the anatomical knowledge related to visual inputs to the MTL and physiological studies examining object-related information processed along the ventral pathway briefly. Thereafter, we discuss the space-related information, the processing of which was unclear, presumably because of its multiple aspects and a lack of appropriate task paradigm in contrast to object-related information. Based on recent electrophysiological studies using non-human primates and the existing literature, we proposed the reunification theory, which explains brain mechanisms which construct object-location signals at each gaze. In this reunification theory, the ventral pathway signals a large-scale background image of the retina at each gaze position. This view-center background signal reflects the first person's perspective and specifies the allocentric location in the environment by similarity matching between images. The spatially invariant object signal and view-center background signal, both of which are derived from the same retinal image, are integrated again (i.e., reunification) along the ventral pathway-MTL stream, particularly in the perirhinal cortex. The conjunctive signal, which represents a particular object at a particular location, may play a role in scene perception in the HPC as a key constituent element of an entire scene.

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