Faculty, Staff and Student Publications

Publication Date

8-1-2022

Journal

Neuroimage

Abstract

Visual inputs to early visual cortex integrate with semantic, linguistic and memory inputs in higher visual cortex, in a manner that is rapid and accurate, and enables complex computations such as face recognition and word reading. This implies the existence of fundamental organizational principles that enable such efficiency. To elaborate on this, we performed intracranial recordings in 82 individuals while they performed tasks of varying visual and cognitive complexity. We discovered that visual inputs induce highly organized posterior-to-anterior propagating patterns of phase modulation across the ventral occipitotemporal cortex. At individual electrodes there was a stereotyped temporal pattern of phase progression following both stimulus onset and offset, consistent across trials and tasks. The phase of low frequency activity in anterior regions was predicted by the prior phase in posterior cortical regions. This spatiotemporal propagation of phase likely serves as a feed-forward organizational influence enabling the integration of information across the ventral visual stream. This phase modulation manifests as the early components of the event related potential; one of the most commonly used measures in human electrophysiology. These findings illuminate fundamental organizational principles of the higher order visual system that enable the rapid recognition and characterization of a variety of inputs.

Keywords

Humans, Pattern Recognition, Visual, Reading, Recognition, Psychology, Visual Cortex, Electrophysiology, Visual cortex, Intracranial recordings, Inter-trial phase coherence, Reading, Face perception

DOI

10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119262

PMID

35504563

PMCID

PMC9382906

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

8-17-2022

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Published Open-Access

yes

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