4.7 Article

Occipital cortex is modulated by transsaccadic changes in spatial frequency: an fMRI study

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SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-87506-2

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  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Council (NSERC) of Canada Discovery grant
  2. NSERC Brain-in-Action CREATE program
  3. Canada Research Chair Program

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This study investigated whether inferior parietal and ventral occipital cortex are involved in transsaccadic processing of different features and found that parietal regions showed task specificity while occipital regions were modulated in a saccade control task. Only occipital cortex showed transsaccadic feature modulations, with significant repetition enhancement in the right cuneus, suggesting a specific role for cuneus in spatial frequency processing during transsaccadic vision.
Previous neuroimaging studies have shown that inferior parietal and ventral occipital cortex are involved in the transsaccadic processing of visual object orientation. Here, we investigated whether the same areas are also involved in transsaccadic processing of a different feature, namely, spatial frequency. We employed a functional magnetic resonance imaging paradigm where participants briefly viewed a grating stimulus with a specific spatial frequency that later reappeared with the same or different frequency, after a saccade or continuous fixation. First, using a whole-brain Saccade>Fixation contrast, we localized two frontal (left precentral sulcus and right medial superior frontal gyrus), four parietal (bilateral superior parietal lobule and precuneus), and four occipital (bilateral cuneus and lingual gyri) regions. Whereas the frontoparietal sites showed task specificity, the occipital sites were also modulated in a saccade control task. Only occipital cortex showed transsaccadic feature modulations, with significant repetition enhancement in right cuneus. These observations (parietal task specificity, occipital enhancement, right lateralization) are consistent with previous transsaccadic studies. However, the specific regions differed (ventrolateral for orientation, dorsomedial for spatial frequency). Overall, this study supports a general role for occipital and parietal cortex in transsaccadic vision, with a specific role for cuneus in spatial frequency processing.

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