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Neural Correlates of Fixated Low- and High-level Scene Properties during Active Scene Viewing

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Abstract
During real-world scene perception, viewers actively direct their attention through a scene in a controlled sequence of eye fixations. During each fixation, local scene properties are attended, analyzed, and interpreted. What is the relationship between fixated scene properties and neural activity in the visual cortex? Participants inspected photographs of real-world scenes in an MRI scanner while their eye movements were recorded. Fixation-related fMRI was used to measure activation as a function of lower- and higher-level scene properties at fixation, operationalized as edge density and meaning maps, respectively. We found that edge density at fixation was most associated with activation in early visual areas, whereas semantic content at fixation was most associated with activation along the ventral visual stream including core object and scene-selective areas (lateral occipital complex, parahippocampal place area, occipital place area, and retrosplenial cortex). The observed activation from semantic content was not accounted for by differences in edge density. The results are consistent with active vision models in which fixation gates detailed visual analysis for fixated scene regions, and this gating influences both lower and higher levels of scene analysis.
Author(s)
Henderson, John M.Goold, Jessica E.Choi, WonilHayes, Taylor R.
Issued Date
2020-10
Type
Article
DOI
10.1162/jocn_a_01599
URI
https://scholar.gist.ac.kr/handle/local/11946
Publisher
MIT PRESS
Citation
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, v.32, no.10, pp.2013 - 2023
ISSN
0898-929X
Appears in Collections:
School of Humanities and Social Sciences > 1. Journal Articles
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