Perceptual processing in the ventral visual stream requires area TE but not rhinal cortex

There is an on-going debate over whether area TE, or the anatomically adjacent rhinal cortex, is the final stage of visual object processing. Both regions have been implicated in visual perception, but their involvement in non-perceptual functions, such as short-term memory, hinders clear-cut interp...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Mark AG Eldridge, Narihisa Matsumoto, John H Wittig Jnr, Evan C Masseau, Richard C Saunders, Barry J Richmond
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: eLife Sciences Publications Ltd 2018-10-01
Series:eLife
Subjects:
Online Access:https://elifesciences.org/articles/36310
Description
Summary:There is an on-going debate over whether area TE, or the anatomically adjacent rhinal cortex, is the final stage of visual object processing. Both regions have been implicated in visual perception, but their involvement in non-perceptual functions, such as short-term memory, hinders clear-cut interpretation. Here, using a two-interval forced choice task without a short-term memory demand, we find that after bilateral removal of area TE, monkeys trained to categorize images based on perceptual similarity (morphs between dogs and cats), are, on the initial viewing, badly impaired when given a new set of images. They improve markedly with a small amount of practice but nonetheless remain moderately impaired indefinitely. The monkeys with bilateral removal of rhinal cortex are, under all conditions, indistinguishable from unoperated controls. We conclude that the final stage of the integration of visual perceptual information into object percepts in the ventral visual stream occurs in area TE.
ISSN:2050-084X