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Related Concept Videos

Parallel Processing01:20

Parallel Processing

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The brain processes sensory information rapidly due to parallel processing, which involves sending data across multiple neural pathways at the same time. This method allows the brain to manage various sensory qualities, such as shapes, colors, movements, and locations, all concurrently. For instance, when observing a forest landscape, the brain simultaneously processes the movement of leaves, the shapes of trees, the depth between them, and the various shades of green. This enables a quick and...
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Depth perception is the ability to perceive objects three-dimensionally. It relies on two types of cues: binocular and monocular. Binocular cues depend on the combination of images from both eyes and how the eyes work together. Since the eyes are in slightly different positions, each eye captures a slightly different image. This disparity between images, known as binocular disparity, helps the brain interpret depth. When the brain compares these images, it determines the distance to an object.
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Gestalt Principles of Perception01:21

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Gestalt principles provide a framework for understanding how humans perceive objects as unified wholes within their context. These principles are essential in explaining the cognitive processes that make sense of complex visual stimuli by organizing them into coherent groups. One fundamental principle is proximity, which posits that objects located close to each other are perceived as a collective group. For instance, when dots are positioned near one another, the visual system interprets them...
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Vision01:24

Vision

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Vision is the result of light being detected and transduced into neural signals by the retina of the eye. This information is then further analyzed and interpreted by the brain. First, light enters the front of the eye and is focused by the cornea and lens onto the retina—a thin sheet of neural tissue lining the back of the eye. Because of refraction through the convex lens of the eye, images are projected onto the retina upside-down and reversed.
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Visual System01:26

Visual System

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Light enters the eye through the cornea, a transparent, dome-shaped surface covering the surface of the eyeball that helps to direct and focus incoming light. This light is then channeled toward the pupil, an adjustable opening whose size is controlled by the iris. The iris, a pigmented muscle, regulates the amount of light entering the eye by contracting or dilating the pupil, thereby ensuring optimal light levels for clear vision.
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Color Vision

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Color perception begins in the retina, the light-sensitive layer at the back of the eye. Two main theories explain how colors are seen: the trichromatic theory and the opponent-process theory. The trichromatic theory, proposed by Thomas Young in 1802 and extended by Hermann von Helmholtz in 1852, suggests that color vision is based on three types of cone receptors in the retina. These cones are sensitive to different but overlapping ranges of wavelengths corresponding to red, blue, and green.
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Related Experiment Video

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Cross-Modal Multivariate Pattern Analysis
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Encoding-Stage Crosstalk Between Object- and Spatial Property-Based Scene Processing Pathways.

Drew Linsley1, Sean P MacEvoy1

  • 1Department of Psychology, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, USA.

Cerebral Cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991)
|March 11, 2014
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Object content in scenes influences spatial perception, biasing scene categorization. This crosstalk between object and spatial processing, particularly in the parahippocampal place area (PPA), harmonizes scene identity estimates early in processing.

Keywords:
fMRImultivoxel pattern analysesparahippocampal place areascene perceptionspatial layout

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Neuroscience
  • Visual Perception

Background:

  • Scene categorization relies on object identity and spatial layout.
  • Discrepancies between these sources can lead to conflicting category judgments.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the crosstalk between object and spatial processing pathways in scene perception.
  • To test if object content biases the encoding of spatial properties.

Main Methods:

  • Behavioral experiments measuring perceived spatial properties.
  • Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to record brain activity in the parahippocampal place area (PPA).

Main Results:

  • Object presence biases encoded spatial properties towards the category average.
  • This bias is observed in both behavioral data and PPA activity patterns.
  • The parahippocampal place area (PPA) shows modulation by object content.

Conclusions:

  • Harmonization of scene identity estimates begins during spatial property encoding.
  • The PPA plays a crucial role in integrating object and spatial information for scene perception.