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SeminarPsychology

Investigating visual recognition and the temporal lobes using electrophysiology and fast periodic visual stimulation

Angelique Volfart
University of Louvain
Jun 24, 2021

The ventral visual pathway extends from the occipital to the anterior temporal regions, and is specialized in giving meaning to objects and people that are perceived through vision. Numerous studies in functional magnetic resonance imaging have focused on the cerebral basis of visual recognition. However, this technique is susceptible to magnetic artefacts in ventral anterior temporal regions and it has led to an underestimation of the role of these regions within the ventral visual stream, especially with respect to face recognition and semantic representations. Moreover, there is an increasing need for implicit methods assessing these functions as explicit tasks lack specificity. In this talk, I will present three studies using fast periodic visual stimulation (FPVS) in combination with scalp and/or intracerebral EEG to overcome these limitations and provide high SNR in temporal regions. I will show that, beyond face recognition, FPVS can be extended to investigate semantic representations using a face-name association paradigm and a semantic categorisation paradigm with written words. These results shed new light on the role of temporal regions and demonstrate the high potential of the FPVS approach as a powerful electrophysiological tool to assess various cognitive functions in neurotypical and clinical populations.

SeminarPsychology

The contribution of the dorsal visual pathway to perception and action

Erez Freud
York University
Apr 29, 2021

The human visual system enables us to recognize objects (e.g., this is a cup) and act upon them (e.g., grasp the cup) with astonishing ease and accuracy. For decades, it was widely accepted that these different functions rely on two separated cortical pathways. The ventral occipitotemporal pathway subserves object recognition, while the dorsal occipitoparietal pathway promotes visually guided actions. In my talk, I will discuss recent evidence from a series of neuropsychological, developmental and neuroimaging studies that were aimed to explore the nature of object representations in the dorsal pathway. The results from these studies highlight the plausible role of the dorsal pathway in object perception and reveal an interplay between shape representations derived by the two pathways. Together, these findings challenge the binary distinction between the two pathways and are consistent with the view that object recognition is not the sole product of ventral pathway computations, but instead relies on a distributed network of regions.

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