4.7 Article

Preferential signal pathways during the perception and imagery of familiar scenes: An effective connectivity study

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 44, Issue 10, Pages 3954-3971

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.26313

Keywords

dynamic causal modeling; fMRI; navigation; resting-state functional connectivity; visual imagery; visual perception

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The study combined fMRI, rs-fc, and effective connectivity to assess brain signals during perception and imagery of landmarks. The results showed that the occipital and temporo-medial brain regions were involved in both perception and imagery of scenes, but the specific interactions between these regions during spatial recollection are still unknown.
The perception and imagery of landmarks activate similar content-dependent brain areas, including occipital and temporo-medial brain regions. However, how these areas interact during visual perception and imagery of scenes, especially when recollecting their spatial location, remains unknown. Here, we combined functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), resting-state functional connectivity (rs-fc), and effective connectivity to assess spontaneous fluctuations and task-induced modulation of signals among regions entailing scene-processing, the primary visual area and the hippocampus (HC), responsible for the retrieval of stored information. First, we functionally defined the scene-selective regions, that is, the occipital place area (OPA), the retrosplenial complex (RSC) and the parahippocampal place area (PPA), by using the face/scene localizer, observing that two portions of the PPA-anterior and posterior PPA-were consistently activated in all subjects. Second, the rs-fc analysis (n = 77) revealed a connectivity pathway similar to the one described in macaques, showing separate connectivity routes linking the anterior PPA with RSC and HC, and the posterior PPA with OPA. Third, we used dynamic causal modelling to evaluate whether the dynamic couplings among these regions differ between perception and imagery of familiar landmarks during a fMRI task (n = 16). We found a positive effect of HC on RSC during the retrieval of imagined places and an effect of occipital regions on both RSC and pPPA during the perception of scenes. Overall, we propose that under similar functional architecture at rest, different neural interactions take place between regions in the occipito-temporal higher-level visual cortex and the HC, subserving scene perception and imagery.

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