Abstract
AbstractDuring normal vision, our eyes provide the brain with a continuous stream of useful information about the world. How visually specialized areas of the cortex, such as face-selective patches, operate under natural modes of behavior is poorly understood. Here we report that, during the free viewing of videos, cohorts of face-selective neurons in the macaque cortex fractionate into distributed and parallel subnetworks that carry distinct information. We classified neurons into functional groups based on their video-driven coupling with fMRI time courses across the brain. Neurons from each group were distributed across multiple face patches but intermixed locally with other groups at each recording site. These findings challenge prevailing views about functional segregation in the cortex and underscore the importance of naturalistic paradigms for cognitive neuroscience.One-Sentence SummaryNatural visual experience reveals parallel functional subnetworks of neurons embedded within the macaque face patch system
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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