Abstract
AbstractHuman early visual cortex response amplitudes monotonically increase with numerosity (object number), regardless of object size and spacing. However, numerosity is typically considered a high-level visual or cognitive feature, while early visual responses follow image contrast in the spatial frequency domain. We found that, at fixed contrast, aggregate Fourier power (at all orientations and spatial frequencies) followed numerosity closely but nonlinearly with little effect of object size, spacing or shape. This would allow straightforward numerosity estimation from spatial frequency domain image representations. Using 7T fMRI, we showed monotonic responses originate in primary visual cortex (V1) at the stimulus’s retinotopic location. Responses here and in neural network models followed aggregate Fourier power more closely than numerosity. Truly numerosity tuned responses emerged after lateral occipital cortex and were independent of retinotopic location. We propose numerosity’s straightforward perception and neural responses may have built on behaviorally beneficial spatial frequency analyses in simpler animals.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory