Seeing the future: Natural image sequences produce anticipatory neuronal activity and bias perceptual report

David I. Perrett, Dengke Xiao, Nick E. Barraclough, Christian Keysers, Mike W. Oram

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

This paper relates human perception to the functioning of cells in the temporal cortex that are engaged in high-level pattern processing. We review historical developments concerning (a) the functional organization of cells processing faces and (b) the selectivity for faces in cell responses. We then focus on (c) the comparison of perception and cell responses to images of faces presented in sequences of unrelated images. Specifically the paper concerns the cell function and perception in circumstances where meaningful patterns occur momentarily in the context of a naturally or unnaturally changing visual environment. Experience of visual sequences allows anticipation, yet one sensory stimulus also omaskso perception and neural processing of subsequent stimuli. To understand this paradox we compared cell responses in monkey temporal cortex to body images presented individually, in pairs and in action sequences. Responses to one image suppressed responses to similar images for 500ms. This suppression led to responses peaking 100ms earlier to image sequences than to isolated images (e.g., during head rotation, face-selective activity peaks before the face confronts the observer). Thus forward masking has unrecognized benefits for perception because it can transform neuronal activity to make it predictive during natural change.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2081-2104
Number of pages24
JournalThe Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology
Volume62
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2009

Keywords

  • Prediction
  • Sequence
  • Masking
  • Face
  • Single cell
  • INFERIOR TEMPORAL CORTEX
  • MONKEY INFEROTEMPORAL CORTEX
  • FACE-SELECTIVE CELLS
  • MACAQUE MONKEY
  • FUNCTIONAL-ORGANIZATION
  • NEURAL REPRESENTATION
  • VISUAL MASKING
  • MECHANISMS
  • RECOGNITION
  • ADAPTATION

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