A stimulus-driven approach reveals vertical luminance gradient as a stimulus feature that drives human cortical scene selectivity
•Visual scene stimuli share a common vertical luminance gradient (VLG).•VLG is correlated with cortical scene selectivity in complex, naturalistic stimuli.•Tightly controlled stimuli of VLG drive cortical scene selectivity.•Humans behaviorally categorize tightly controlled stimuli of VLG as a “place...
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Veröffentlicht in: | NeuroImage (Orlando, Fla.) Fla.), 2023-04, Vol.269, p.119935-119935, Article 119935 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Visual scene stimuli share a common vertical luminance gradient (VLG).•VLG is correlated with cortical scene selectivity in complex, naturalistic stimuli.•Tightly controlled stimuli of VLG drive cortical scene selectivity.•Humans behaviorally categorize tightly controlled stimuli of VLG as a “place”.•Visual scenes may be characterized by a set of common and unique features.
Human neuroimaging studies have revealed a dedicated cortical system for visual scene processing. But what is a “scene”? Here, we use a stimulus-driven approach to identify a stimulus feature that selectively drives cortical scene processing. Specifically, using fMRI data from BOLD5000, we examined the images that elicited the greatest response in the cortical scene processing system, and found that there is a common “vertical luminance gradient” (VLG), with the top half of a scene image brighter than the bottom half; moreover, across the entire set of images, VLG systematically increases with the neural response in the scene-selective regions (Study 1). Thus, we hypothesized that VLG is a stimulus feature that selectively engages cortical scene processing, and directly tested the role of VLG in driving cortical scene selectivity using tightly controlled VLG stimuli (Study 2). Consistent with our hypothesis, we found that the scene-selective cortical regions—but not an object-selective region or early visual cortex—responded significantly more to images of VLG over control stimuli with minimal VLG. Interestingly, such selectivity was also found for images with an “inverted” VLG, resembling the luminance gradient in night scenes. Finally, we also tested the behavioral relevance of VLG for visual scene recognition (Study 3); we found that participants even categorized tightly controlled stimuli of both upright and inverted VLG to be a place more than an object, indicating that VLG is also used for behavioral scene recognition. Taken together, these results reveal that VLG is a stimulus feature that selectively engages cortical scene processing, and provide evidence for a recent proposal that visual scenes can be characterized by a set of common and unique visual features. |
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ISSN: | 1053-8119 1095-9572 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.119935 |