4.5 Article

Dorsal-Ventral Visual Pathways and Object Characteristics: Beamformer Source Analysis of EEG

Journal

CMC-COMPUTERS MATERIALS & CONTINUA
Volume 70, Issue 2, Pages 2347-2363

Publisher

TECH SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.32604/cmc.2022.020299

Keywords

Mental rotation; EEG; source localization; DICS beamformer; dorsal-ventral pathway

Funding

  1. DST-INSPIRE Program
  2. Department of Science & Technology, Government of India [IF150444]

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The study investigates how the visuospatial characteristics of objects in a MR-based computer game influence cortical activities in dorsal-ventral visual pathways. The research found that angular disparity has a greater impact on cortical activation, showing higher activation for 2D objects and CA compared to 3D objects and RA, respectively. The dorsal pathway was more active than the ventral pathway, suggesting that angular disparity plays a significant role in engaging different visual pathways in the brain.
In performing a gaming task, mental rotation (MR) is one of the important aspects of visuospatial processing. MR involves dorsal-ventral pathways of the brain. Visual objects/models used in computer-games play a crucial role in gaming experience of the users. The visuospatial characteristics of the objects used in the computer-game influence the engagement of dorsal-ventral visual pathways. The current study investigates how the objects' visuospatial characteristics (i.e., angular disparity and dimensionality) in an MR-based computer-game influence the cortical activities in dorsal ventral visual pathways. Both the factors have two levels, angular disparity: convex angle (CA) vs. reflex angle (RA) and dimensionality: 2D vs. 3D. Sixty healthy adults, aged, 18-29 years (M = 21.6) were recruited for the study and randomly assigned to four gaming conditions i.e., 15 participants in each group. The multichannel electroencephalogram (EEG) data were recorded from 60 healthy adults while playing the game. The source reconstruction was done for similar to 3000 sources inside the brain using the Dynamic Imaging of Coherent Sources (DICS) beamforming method for theta 1(4-5.75), theta 2(5.75-7.5), alpha 1(7.5-9), alpha 2(9-11), alpha 3(11-13), beta 1(13-17.25), beta 2(17.25-21.5) Hz frequency sub-bands. The reconstructed neuronal sources were segmented into 68 functionally parcellated brain regions, and the percentage of active sources for each region was computed. Further, the differences across the 68 regions among the four gaming conditions were evaluated using the percentage of active sources. The differences in activation for the dorsal-ventral pathways and some additional brain regions were observed among the four groups. The game with 2D objects and CA showed higher activation than that with 3D objects and RA, respectively. The dorsal pathway was found to be more active in contrast to the ventral pathway. The findings suggest that angular disparity and dimensionality in MR influence the engagement of dorsal-ventral visual pathways in such a way that angular disparity has a greater impact on cortical activation across this region than dimensionality. Also, higher activation for CA as compared to RA irrespective of dimensionality reflects the complexity of spatial information processing under CA. Similarly, greater activation was seen for 2D objects than 3D, indicating difficulty in information processing due to deficient visual features.

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