2008
DOI: 10.1007/s00221-008-1417-6
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Occipital network for figure/ground organization

Abstract: This is the accepted version of the paper.This version of the publication may differ from the final published version. Abstract To study the cortical mechanism of Wgure/ ground categorization in the human brain, we employed fMRI and the temporal-asynchrony paradigm. This paradigm is able to eliminate any diVerential activation for local stimulus features, and thus to identify only global perceptual interactions. Strong segmentation of the image into diVerent spatial conWgurations was generated solely from temp… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(60 citation statements)
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References 65 publications
(72 reference statements)
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“…The use of lateralized presentations uncovered a previously unobserved hemispheric asymmetry: competition-mediated ground suppression was only evident in the LH with RVF presentation, not in the RH with LVF presentation. Hemispheric differences were not observed previously because stimuli were either presented centrally (e.g., Likova & Tyler, 2008;Peterson & Kim, 2001;Peterson & Skow, 2008;Salvagio et al, 2012;Strother et al, 2012) or were presented in the RVF only and only LH activation was assessed (Kaster & Beck, 2005;Scalf et al, 2011). Although laterality effects are not uncommon in cognitive neuroscience, this result still raises the question of why our effect was only observed the LH.…”
Section: Competition-mediated Ground Suppression ! 22mentioning
confidence: 51%
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“…The use of lateralized presentations uncovered a previously unobserved hemispheric asymmetry: competition-mediated ground suppression was only evident in the LH with RVF presentation, not in the RH with LVF presentation. Hemispheric differences were not observed previously because stimuli were either presented centrally (e.g., Likova & Tyler, 2008;Peterson & Kim, 2001;Peterson & Skow, 2008;Salvagio et al, 2012;Strother et al, 2012) or were presented in the RVF only and only LH activation was assessed (Kaster & Beck, 2005;Scalf et al, 2011). Although laterality effects are not uncommon in cognitive neuroscience, this result still raises the question of why our effect was only observed the LH.…”
Section: Competition-mediated Ground Suppression ! 22mentioning
confidence: 51%
“…One set of theories and models posit that two adjacent regions compete for object status (Craft et al, 2007;Grossberg, 1994;Kienker et al, 1986;Sejnowski & Hinton, 1987) with the winner perceived as the object, and the loser perceived as a shapeless ground. There has been some debate regarding whether neural responses are facilitated for perceived objects (Appelbaum, Wade, Vildavski, Pettet, & Norcia, 2006;Appelbaum, Wade, Pettet, Vildavski, & Norcia, 2008;Lamme, 1995), suppressed for grounds (Likova & Tyler, 2008;Peterson & Skow, 2008;Salvagio et al, 2012;Tsotsos, Culhane, Kei Wai, Lai, Davis, & Nuflo, 1995), or whether both effects occur (Strother et al, 2012). Here, our use of retinotopic mapping and precise localization of the cortical representations of the figure and ground allowed us to provide supporting evidence for ground suppression as a mechanism behind object perception.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 70%
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