Freedman DJ, Miller EK.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2007 Aug 15
How does the brain recognize the meaning of sensory stimuli? Through experience, we easily learn to group stimuli into meaningful categories such as "chair", "table" and "vehicle". Although much is known about how the brain processes and encodes basic visual features (e.g. color, orientation, and motion direction), much less is known about how the brain learns and represents the behavioral relevance, or category, of stimuli. This article will review a number of recent experiments which suggest that neuronal activity in primate prefrontal, temporal and parietal cortical areas likely plays significant, though complementary, roles in visual categorization and category learning.
PMID: 17950874
Fulltext: sciencedirect
Thursday, December 6, 2007
Neural mechanisms of visual categorization: Insights from neurophysiology
Posted by Ali at 7:48 AM
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