Cortical integration of contextual information across objects

Tomer Livne, Moshe Bar

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Recognizing objects in the environment and understanding our surroundings often depend on context: the presence of other objects and knowledge about their relations with each other. Such contextual information activates a set of medial lobe brain regions, the parahippocampal cortex and the retrosplenial complex. Both regions are more activated by single objects with a unique contextual association than by objects not associated with any specific context. Similarly they are more activated by spatially coherent arrangements of objects when those are consistent with their known spatial relations. The current study tested how context in multiple-object displays is represented in these regions in the absence of relevant spatial information. Using an fMRI slow-event-related design, we show that the precuneus (a subpart of the retrosplenial complex) is more activated by simultaneously presented contextually related objects than by unrelated objects. This suggests that the representation of context in this region is cumulative, representing integrated information across objects in the display. We discuss these findings in relation to processing of visual information and relate them to previous finding of contextual effects in perception.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)948-958
Number of pages11
JournalJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
Volume10
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2016

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2012, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Funding

We thank Olivia Cheung for helpful discussions and for commenting on an early draft and Matthew Panichello for assistance in data acquisition. We thank the Harvard decision science laboratory for providing us with lab space and equipment to run the behavioral pilot part of the study. This work was supported by NSF Grant BCS-0842947 and by the Israeli Center of Research Excellence in Cognitive Sciences (ICORE Grant No. 51/11). T. L. and M. B. designed the experiment; T. L. ran the experiment and performed the analysis; T. L. and M. B. wrote the paper.

FundersFunder number
Harvard decision science laboratory
Israeli Center of Research Excellence in Cognitive Sciences51/11
National Science FoundationBCS-0842947

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