• Title of article

    Visual detection and identification are not the same: Evidence from psychophysics and fMRI

  • Author/Authors

    Straube، نويسنده , , Sirko and Fahle، نويسنده , , Manfred، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
  • Pages
    10
  • From page
    29
  • To page
    38
  • Abstract
    Sometimes object detection as opposed to identification is sufficient to initiate the appropriate action. To explore the neural origin of behavioural differences between the two tasks, we combine psychophysical measurements and fMRI, specifically contrasting shape detection versus identification of a figure. This figure consisted of Gabor elements being oriented differently from those in the background. We equalized performance levels for detection and identification by adjusting orientation differences accordingly for each observer. Hence, stimulus saliency was constant for both tasks allowing a differentiation between the activations specific for detection versus identification processes. Identification yielded higher psychophysical thresholds, slower reaction times and increased hemodynamic activations in the lateral–occipital complex (LOC) and an adjacent area in the collateral sulcus (CoS). Additional analysis using cortex-based alignment revealed four voxel-clusters differentially activated by the tasks, situated in the inferior parietal lobe, the precuneus, the anterior cingulum and the medial frontal gyrus. Our results indicate partly separated cortical mechanisms for object detection and identification.
  • Keywords
    human , Identification , detection , Visual , Cortex-based alignment , Task-specificity , Saliency , FMRI , Figure-ground segregation , Object recognition
  • Journal title
    Brain and Cognition
  • Serial Year
    2011
  • Journal title
    Brain and Cognition
  • Record number

    2250319