It is not just the category: behavioral effects of fMRI-guided electrical microstimulation result from a complex interplay of factors

Author:

Kumar Satwant123ORCID,Mergan Eline12ORCID,Vogels Rufin12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Laboratorium voor Neuro- en Psychofysiologie, Department of Neurosciences, KU Leuven, Herestraat 49, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

2. Leuven Brain Institute, KU Leuven, Herestraat 49, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

3. Center for Perceptual Systems, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX 78712, USA

Abstract

Abstract Functional imaging and electrophysiological studies in primates revealed the existence of patches selective for visual categories in the inferior temporal cortex. Understanding the contribution of these patches to perception requires causal techniques that assess the effect of neural activity manipulations on perception. We used electrical microstimulation (EM) to determine the role of body patch activity in visual categorization in macaques. We tested the hypothesis that EM in a body patch would affect the categorization of bodies versus objects but not of other visual categories. We employed low-current EM of an anterior body patch (ASB) in the superior temporal sulcus, which was defined by functional magnetic resonance imaging and verified with electrophysiological recordings in each session. EM of ASB affected body categorization, but the EM effects were more complex than the expected increase of body-related choices: EM affected the categorization of both body and inanimate images and showed interaction with the choice target location, but its effect was location-specific (tested in 1 subject) on a millimeter scale. Our findings suggest that the behavioral effects of EM in a category-selective patch are not merely a manifestation of the category selectivity of the underlying neuronal population but reflect a complex interplay of multiple factors.

Funder

Fonds voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

European Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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