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Naturalistic Object Representations Depend on Distance and Size Cues.

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    Brain responses to real objects differ from pictures, especially concerning distance and size cues. Real objects engage action-related brain regions more strongly, with distance influencing responses, unlike ambiguous pictorial stimuli.

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    Area of Science:

    • Neuroscience
    • Cognitive Science
    • Visual Perception

    Background:

    • Traditional vision frameworks link object size to the ventral visual pathway and spatial distance to the dorsal pathway.
    • These frameworks often rely on 2D stimuli with ambiguous size and distance information.
    • The impact of unambiguous real-world cues on brain representations remains less understood.

    Approach:

    • Used functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to compare brain responses to real objects versus their 2D pictures.
    • Presented stimuli at varying egocentric distances (near and far).
    • Analyzed fMRI response amplitudes and patterns in relation to stimulus format and distance.

    Key Points:

    • Real objects, unlike pictures, elicited stronger fMRI responses in lateral occipital and posterior parietal cortices.
    • Distance modulated responses to real objects in action-guidance regions, suggesting context-dependent action relevance.
    • Object size was represented in both ventral and dorsal cortices for real objects, but primarily in ventral cortex for pictures.

    Conclusions:

    • Brain representations reflect physical object characteristics when stimuli provide unambiguous information.
    • The distinction between ventral (what) and dorsal (where/how) pathway processing is less rigid when real-world cues are clear.
    • Findings offer insights into naturalistic object perception and brain representations of physical attributes.