Affiliation:
1. New York University and Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
2. Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research
3. New York University
4. Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research and New York University School of Medicine
Abstract
Abstract
Object recognition is achieved even in circumstances when only partial information is available to the observer. Perceptual closure processes are essential in enabling such recognitions to occur. We presented successively less fragmented images while recording high-density event-related potentials (ERPs), which permitted us to monitor brain activity during the perceptual closure processes leading up to object recognition. We reveal a bilateral ERP component (Ncl) that tracks these processes (onsets ∼ 230 msec, maximal at ∼290 msec). Scalp-current density mapping of the Ncl revealed bilateral occipito-temporal scalp foci, which are consistent with generators in the human ventral visual stream, and specifically the lateral-occipital or LO complex as defined by hemodynamic studies of object recognition.
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218 articles.
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