Abstract

The existence and neuroanatomical locations of separate extrastriate visual pathways for object recognition and spatial localization were investigated in healthy young men. Regional cerebral blood flow was measured by positron emission tomography and bolus injections of H2(15)O, while subjects performed face matching, dot-location matching, or sensorimotor control tasks. Both visual matching tasks activated lateral occipital cortex. Face discrimination alone activated a region of occipitotemporal cortex that was anterior and inferior to the occipital area activated by both tasks. The spatial location task alone activated a region of lateral superior parietal cortex. Perisylvian and anterior temporal cortices were not activated by either task. These results demonstrate the existence of three functionally dissociable regions of human visual extrastriate cortex. The ventral and dorsal locations of the regions specialized for object recognition and spatial localization, respectively, suggest some homology between human and nonhuman primate extrastriate cortex, with displacement in human brain, possibly related to the evolution of phylogenetically newer cortical areas.

Keywords

Extrastriate cortexNeuroscienceVisual cortexPsychologyTemporal cortexVisual systemHuman brainCognitive neuroscience of visual object recognitionFunctional specializationCerebral cortexAnatomyBiologyArtificial intelligenceComputer scienceObject (grammar)

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Year
1991
Type
article
Volume
88
Issue
5
Pages
1621-1625
Citations
1040
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Closed

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James V. Haxby, C. L. Grady, Barry Horwitz et al. (1991). Dissociation of object and spatial visual processing pathways in human extrastriate cortex.. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences , 88 (5) , 1621-1625. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.88.5.1621

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DOI
10.1073/pnas.88.5.1621