Data-driven functional clustering reveals dominance of face, place, and body selectivity in the ventral visual pathway

Regions selective for faces, places, and bodies feature prominently in the literature on the human ventral visual pathway. Are selectivities for these categories in fact the most robust response profiles in this pathway, or is their prominence an artifact of biased sampling of the hypothesis space i...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of neurophysiology Vol. 108; no. 8; pp. 2306 - 2322
Main Authors Vul, Edward, Lashkari, Danial, Hsieh, Po-Jang, Golland, Polina, Kanwisher, Nancy
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Physiological Society 01.10.2012
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ISSN0022-3077
1522-1598
1522-1598
DOI10.1152/jn.00354.2011

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Summary:Regions selective for faces, places, and bodies feature prominently in the literature on the human ventral visual pathway. Are selectivities for these categories in fact the most robust response profiles in this pathway, or is their prominence an artifact of biased sampling of the hypothesis space in prior work? Here we use a data-driven structure discovery method that avoids the assumptions built into most prior work by 1) giving equal consideration to all possible response profiles over the conditions tested, 2) relaxing implicit anatomical constraints (that important functional profiles should manifest themselves in spatially contiguous voxels arising in similar locations across subjects), and 3) testing for dominant response profiles over images, rather than categories, thus enabling us to discover, rather than presume, the categories respected by the brain. Even with these assumptions relaxed, face, place, and body selectivity emerge as dominant in the ventral stream.
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ISSN:0022-3077
1522-1598
1522-1598
DOI:10.1152/jn.00354.2011